Details
| Type of Product: | e-Book (our e-books are in PDF format and can be viewed on your computer or any compatible reading device) (also see print version of this book) |
| Average Rating: |  based on 3 reviews |
| Publication Date: | 9/21/2011 |
| Pages: | 120 |
| Stock Number: | PB297Xe |
| ISBN: | 978-1-936137-41-1 |
| Grade Level: | High School |
Description
This comprehensive resource for STEM teachers and students, outlines the various stages of large-scale research projects, enabling teachers to coach their students through the research process. This handbook provides enough detail to embolden all teachers—even those who have never designed an experiment on their own—to support student-researchers through the entire process of conducting experiments. Early chapters—research design, background research, hypothesis writing, and proposal writing—help students design and implement their research projects. Later chapters on descriptive and inferential statistics, as well as graphical representations, help them correctly interpret their data. Finally, the last chapters enable students to effectively communicate their results by writing and documenting a STEM research paper, as well as by preparing for oral and poster presentations. Included are student handouts, checklists, presentation observation sheets, and sample assessment rubrics.
Additional Info
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Science Discipline:
(mouse over for full classification)
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Analyzing data
Asking questions
Classifying
Collecting data
Communicating
Experimenting
Hypothesizing
Interpreting data
Observing
Predicting
Scientific habits of mind
Using mathematics
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| Intended User Role: | High-School Educator, Teacher |
| Educational Issues: | Assessment of students, Classroom management, Interdisciplinary, STEM, Teacher preparation, Teaching strategies |
Contents
Chapter 1: Beginning a STEM Research Project
Chapter 2: Research Design
Chapter 3: Background Research
Chapter 4: Writing Hypotheses
Chapter 5: Proposal Writing
Chapter 6: Organizing a Laboratory Notebook
Chapter 7: Descriptive Statistics
Chapter 8: Graphical Representations
Chapter 9: Inferential Statistics and Data Interpretation
Chapter 10: Documentation and Research Paper Setup
Chapter 11: Writing the STEM Research Paper
Chapter 12: Presenting the STEM Research Project
Appendix A: Research Project Due Dates Checklist
Appendix B: Research Presentations Observation Sheet
Appendix C: Research Paper Grade Sheet
Appendix D: Research Paper Grading Rubric
Appendix E: Oral Presentation Rubric
Appendix F: Judge’s Score Sheet for STEM Research Projects
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National Standards Correlation
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[HIDE CORRELATIONS]
- Science as Inquiry
- Abilities necessary to do scientific inquiry
- Identify questions and concepts that guide scientific investigations. (9-12)
- Use technology and mathematics to improve investigations and communications. (9-12)
- Formulate and revise scientific explanations and models using logic and evidence. (9-12)
- Recognize and analyze alternative explanations and models. (9-12)
- Understandings about scientific inquiry
- Mathematics is important in all aspects of scientific inquiry. (5-8)
- Conceptual principles and knowledge guide scientific inquiries. (9-12)
- Historical and current scientific knowledge influence the design and interpretation of investigations and the evaluation of proposed explanations made by other scientists. (9-12)
- Scientists conduct investigations for a wide variety of reasons. For example, they may wish to discover new aspects of the natural world, explain recently observed phenomena, or test the conclusions of prior investigations or the predictions of current theories. (9-12)
- Scientists rely on technology to enhance the gathering and manipulation of data. (9-12)
- New techniques and tools provide new evidence to guide inquiry and new methods to gather data, thereby contributing to the advance of science. (9-12)
- The accuracy and precision of the data, and therefore the quality of the exploration, depends on the technology used. (9-12)
- In presenting data, graphs are used to convey comparisons or trends. (9-12)
- Mathematical tools and models guide and improve the posing of questions, gathering data, constructing explanations and communicating results. (9-12)
- Scientific explanations must adhere to criteria such as: a proposed explanation must be logically consistent; it must abide by the rules of evidence; it must be open to questions and possible modification; and it must be based on historical and current scientific knowledge. (9-12)
- Results of scientific inquiry--new knowledge and methods--emerge from different types of investigations and public communication among scientists. (9-12)
- In communicating and defending the results of scientific inquiry, arguments must be logical and demonstrate connections between natural phenomena, investigations, and the historical body of scientific knowledge. (9-12)
- In addition, the methods and procedures that scientists used to obtain evidence must be clearly reported to enhance opportunities for further investigation. (9-12)
- History and Nature of Science
- Nature of scientific knowledge
- Science distinguishes itself from other ways of knowing and from other bodies of knowledge through the use of empirical standards, logical arguments, and skepticism, as scientists strive for the best possible explanations about the natural world. (9-12)
- Scientific explanations must meet certain criteria. (9-12)
- First and foremost, scientific explanations must be consistent with experimental and observational evidence about nature, and must make accurate predictions, when appropriate, about systems being studied. (9-12)
- Scientific explanations should be logical, respect the rules of evidence, be open to criticism, report methods and procedures, and make knowledge public. (9-12)
- Explanations on how the natural world changes based on myths, personal beliefs, religious values, mystical inspiration, superstition, or authority may be personally useful and socially relevant, but they are not scientific. (9-12)
- Because all scientific ideas depend on experimental and observational confirmation, all scientific knowledge is, in principle, subject to change as new evidence becomes available. (9-12)
Customer Reviews
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Great for experimental science only |
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Reviewed by: Hannah Scherer on December 19, 2012 |
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This book is a great resource for teachers looking to help their students with experimental research projects. While the author does acknowledge that the scientific method is more than just a series of linear steps, the book is organized around designing experiments without accommodations for non-experimental (observational) studies. It could be greatly improved by including resources for alternative research designs instead of trying to fit observational studies into the experimental design framework. |
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Indispensable Tool of Student Research |
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Reviewed by: Kathleen G (Hampden, MA) on August 17, 2012 |
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I liked the book when I bought it last fall; I was hooked by spring, and totally in love with it after one of the author's workshops. Written for students it is an excellent and appropriate guide for all levels of Student STEM research whether in curriculum units or full-blown projects. Great ways to discuss the nature of science, and terrificu tools that lead the students to develop all the skills we want them to develop. My research students are buying this as a "course text" (early reviews from them support my own). |
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Indispensable Tool of Student Research |
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Reviewed by: Kathleen G (Hampden, MA) on August 17, 2012 |
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I liked the book when I bought it last fall; I was hooked by spring, and totally in love with it after one of the author's workshops. Written for students it is an excellent and appropriate guide for all levels of Student STEM research whether in curriculum units or full-blown projects. Great ways to discuss the nature of science, and terrificu tools that lead the students to develop all the skills we want them to develop. My research students are buying this as a "course text" (early reviews from them support my own). |
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