All Resources
Journal Article
Methods and Strategies: Science Success for Students With Special Needs
Recent special education legislation such as the Individuals with Disabilities Act (IDEA) emphasizes the placement of students with mild disabilities in the general education classroom. Therefore, students with learning, behavior, and communicating d...
Journal Article
The Prepared Practitioner: Constructivism and Conceptual Change, Part I
Constructivism is the basis for standards, inquiry-based instruction, and a candidate for buzzword of the decade. But what is constructivism? This month’s column provides the answer to this thought-provoking question, and explains why it can be a c...
Journal Article
The Early Years: Counting a Culture of Mealworms
Math is not the only topic that will be discussed when young children are asked to care for and count “mealworms,” a type of insect larvae (just as caterpillars are the babies of butterflies, these larvae are babies of beetles). The following act...
Journal Article
Current Taxonomy in Classroom Instruction
The ability to sequence genes has vastly altered our understanding of higher-level relationships among organisms such as those found at the kingdom level. It is important for biology teachers to incorporate these new views and not retain outdated con...
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Career of the Month: An Interview with Space Architect Constance Adams
Drawing knowledge from many fields—including science, engineering, and art—space architects such as Constance Adams design structures for nonterrestrial environments. In one such project at NASA, Adams works on elements for the International Spac...
Journal Article
Teaching Science Using Stories: The Storyline Approach
Storytelling is an age-old and powerful means of communication that can be used as an effective teaching strategy in the science classroom. This article describes the authors’ experiences implementing the Storyline Approach, an inquiry-based teachi...
Journal Article
Many children enjoy collecting items such as seashells, state quarters, and trading cards. Asking students to think about the ways in which similar items differ, how objects can be grouped by a common characteristic, and how groups can be subsets of ...
Journal Article
Tried and True: Our class periodic table
To facilitate discussions centered on the topic of chemistry, students can create a classroom periodic table. In order to accomplish this task, they research elements in the periodic table using various media (textbooks, Internet), and then create a ...
Journal Article
Launch Excitement with Water Rockets
Explosions and fires—these are what many students are waiting for in science classes. And when they do occur, students pay attention. While we can’t entertain our students with continual mayhem, we can catch their attention and cater to their des...
Journal Article
Nematodes: Model Organisms in High School Biology
In a collaborative effort between university researchers and high school science teachers, an inquiry-based laboratory module was designed using two species of insecticidal nematodes to help students apply scientific inquiry and elements of thoughtfu...
Journal Article
How Much Popcorn Will Our Classroom Hold?
How much popcorn will our classroom hold? This intriguing question sparked a terrific integrated science and math exploration that the author conducted with fifth-and sixth-grade students....
Journal Article
Extrasensory Perception—Pseudoscience?
This case teaches students to be skeptical of “scientific claims,” especially those that are sensational and fall outside the boundaries of normal scientific explanation. Students read the case scenario and then evaluate data to determine whether...
Journal Article
Science Sampler: A first energy grant—Pinwheel electrical generation
This is an interdisciplinary activity—with art, science, and math classes involved—where students design their own pinwheels, and then attach their design to a DC generator (motor). Prior to testing their designs, students are introduced to bas...
Journal Article
The Radish Party inquiry is designed to teach the importance and relevance of soil organic matter to young students. In this investigation, students grow radishes in three different kinds of soils: sand, sand plus nutrients, and potting soil (soil th...
Journal Article
Scope on Safety: Hammering home Earth-science safety
Kids love to cut up, tear apart, and smash things in order to study them. This is one reason they get so excited about the opportunity to study rocks and minerals in the lab or out in the field. Although this can certainly be fun and fuel their curio...
Journal Article
Science Sampler: Doing sophisticated science simply—Help students understand the nature of science
We all recognize the power of inquiry-based instruction when implemented in our classrooms. It engages students and motivates them to actively participate in their learning. But do our students develop a deep understanding about the nature of science...
Journal Article
Narrative informational book circles are the product of our efforts to combine current research in learning and cognition with integrated science and language-arts activities. They present instructional strategies that support students as they make c...
Journal Article
Society for College Science Teachers: Please <em> Don’t </em> Read the Text Before Coming to Lecture
It’s common for college professors to require students to complete a reading from the textbook prior to coming to class. Most professors who maintain syllabi for their courses list the chapters or page numbers that class members should read ahead o...
Journal Article
Teacher’s Toolkit: Improving science instruction through effective group interactions
Cooperative learning is a popular teaching strategy in which groups of students work together to accomplish a common goal, aiding them in developing a comprehensive understanding of a topic or concept. This strategy enables students of diverse backgr...
Journal Article
Guest Editorial: NSF Research Outreach Requirements—An Opportunity for <em> JCST </em> Readers
A recent issue of the American Physical Society newsletter (2007) described the various reactions that research physicists have to the NSF requirement that grant applications seeking support for basic research include a section describing the broader...
Journal Article
To understand more about faculty perceptions of the instructional benefits of and barriers to using case studies, the authors surveyed 101 science faculty at universities and colleges in the United States and Canada. The results provided evidence tha...
Journal Article
Fall Colors, Temperature, and Day Length
Along with the bright hues of orange, red, and yellow, the season of fall represents significant changes, such as day length and temperature. These changes provide excellent opportunities for students to use science process skills to examine how abio...
Journal Article
Giving Birth to Someone Else’s Children? A Case of Disputed Maternity
Most students have heard about situations in which the paternity of a child is questioned; in a surprising reversal, in this case study, maternity is in question. Designed for an introductory biology course, the case involves concepts from genetics, ...
Journal Article
A Cooperative Classroom Investigation of Climate Change
Scientists have a particularly difficult time explaining warming trends in Antarctica—a region with a relatively short history of scientific observation and a highly variable climate (Clarke et al. 2007). Regardless of the mechanism of warming, how...
Journal Article
Editorial: The Boy Scouts Said It Best—Some Advice on Case-Study Teaching and Student Preparation
Students are seldom prepared. They have many things, most not related to school, on their minds in college. In large classes in particular, student attendance falls off precipitously with each passing week of the semester, regardless of the skill of ...
Journal Article
Perspectives: Action Research: Inquiring Into Science Teaching and Learning
Teachers and schools are required by the No Child Left Behind Act to use research-based instructional practices. Although we often think of research as something university professors do, teachers can contribute to the research base on effective inst...
Journal Article
Science Sampler: Metamorphosing into readers
One way to encourage students to read is to choose a subject that interests them. During middle school, students are metamorphosing into young adults. To take advantage of their natural interest in body changes, this unit on moths and butterflies was...
Journal Article
Numerous connections exist between climate science and topics normally covered in physics and physical science courses. For instance, lessons on heat and light can be used to introduce basic climate science, and the study of electric circuits provide...
Journal Article
The hydrologic cycle is a very basic scientific principle. In this article, background information is presented on how the hydrologic cycle provides scientists with clues to understanding the history of Earth’s climate. Also detailed is a web-based...
Journal Article
Supporting English Language Learners’ Reading in the Science Classroom
It may seem obvious that students with limited reading skills also have limited educational opportunities. Students acquiring English as their second, non-native language—presently referred to as English Language Learners (ELLs)—face this obstacl...
Journal Article
Science Sampler: Give students a purpose to read
After some reflection, the author found that by giving her students a purpose to read has led to a deeper understanding of the text. In this article, she outlines the questions teachers should ask themselves prior to assigning a reading to ensure its...
Journal Article
Every Day Science Calendar: September 2007
This monthly feature contains facts and challenges for the science explorer. ...








