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Science Teachers Who Draw: The Red Is Always There. This is an invaluable resource for teachers, teacher educators, and qualitative researchers, with color illustrations. There is a book which asks, "What happens when science teachers adopt an aesthetic approach to inquiry, using drawing to communicate deep understanding?" This narrative inquiry was driven by quantitative studies which reveal a robust positive correlation between students' test scores in reading and science, beginning at the middle school level. When the data are disaggregated, there exists a vast achievement gap for low…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Science Teachers Who Draw: The Red Is Always There. This is an invaluable resource for teachers, teacher educators, and qualitative researchers, with color illustrations. There is a book which asks, "What happens when science teachers adopt an aesthetic approach to inquiry, using drawing to communicate deep understanding?" This narrative inquiry was driven by quantitative studies which reveal a robust positive correlation between students' test scores in reading and science, beginning at the middle school level. When the data are disaggregated, there exists a vast achievement gap for low income and English language learners. Science teachers are faced with a semiotic nightmare. Often possessing inadequate pedagogical content knowledge themselves, science teachers must somehow symbolically communicate often highly abstract knowledge in ways that can be not only be decoded by their students' but later used to construct deeper, more differentiated knowledge, which can be applied to make sense of and adapt successfully to life on Planet Earth. This book documents the ways in which science teacher researchers used drawing to construct semiotic spaces inside which students acquired significant aesthetic capital and agency. Many previously failing students brokered this new capital into improved academic achievement and a sense of felt freedom. The author sought not to displace in any way the important traditions of situated, constructivist scientific inquiry, but instead, to convincingly argue that intrinsically inexact, artistic, and poetic ways of understanding and communicating the meaning, context, and processes of science phenomena can catalyze learning reactions resulting in a broad, meaningful spectrum of understanding for all students.
Autorenporträt
Merrie Koester, Ph.D., science educator and author of the nationally implemented Agnes Pflumm science education novels, has been bringing students to science through literature and the creative arts for the last 25 years. As a science and arts integration specialist, she is dedicated to working with each state, district, school and individual teacher to improve achievement in STEM and the Arts education (STEAM). She has facilitated professional development workshops on teaching science through the arts, speaking at district, state, and national level science, STEM and arts education conferences.