Discourse is powerful. And in the science classroom, it’s essential.
This fall, many students will not only experience the usual “summer loss of learning” but also have to catch up on unfinished learning from disruptions due to COVID-19. Teachers must develop a strategy to facilitate the kind of productive discussion that promotes engaged learning—whether in a classroom or a remote or blended learning environment.
So how do you get there?
Fortunately, Judy Higgins, a veteran fifth-grade science teacher in Lawrence, Massachusetts, has shared some of her tools with you. Borrow some of her techniques to take your classroom discussions to the next level. The strategies she shares can easily be applied to help your students meet Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS), as well as fill the gaps in unfinished learning.
Find out how she creates a culture of discourse for her science classroom using tools that are easily adaptable to any lesson plan. Click here to watch the 45-minute webinar.
Every year science teachers face this challenge. But 2020 is not every year. In addition to determining what to teach, you must prioritize where to start, accounting for potential unfinished learning from the spring.
Instead of subjecting students to endless pre-assessments (that you then have to grade), consider discussion instead. “When we are listening, there are so many opportunities for formative assessments,” Judy says.
Before deciding which discussions to have, Judy spends time on her own and with the fourth-grade teachers to survey the curriculum her fifth-graders should have learned. Together, they identified critical concepts—not so she could reteach them, but so she could be prepared to bring those concepts into the learning sequence as the year progressed. “I found that science, in particular, is easy for this because we were teaching many of the same concepts, just at different levels,” Judy says.
When diagnosing unfinished learning, Judy learned this key principle: “Don’t assume they know concepts—or that they don’t know them.”
How can you find out? Talk provides an ideal window into student thinking. Don’t underestimate the value of asking questions in a NGSS curriculum, in which curiosity is a prerequisite for investigating and hypothesizing.
As students learn the valuable skill of supporting their reasoning with evidence, you’ll learn where they are in their learning progression. Here are a few tools that work best when diagnosing through discussion:
Judy studied what other school systems did to cope with unfinished learning, specifically systems affected by Hurricane Katrina. What she found was that though those teachers taught units that had been missed at the beginning of the year, the learning was not accelerated.
It’s more productive to address learning gaps all year long through discussions that promote critical thinking. But creating a culture of discourse takes practice.
Judy uses “Sentence Frames” to steer discussion. This KnowAtom discourse tool for grades 3 through 8 is helpful for them to lean on to start sentences. This activity provides students with incomplete sentences that focus on areas such as “supplying evidence to support their views” or “building on others' ideas,” for example.
One example frame is as follows: “Does this connect to __________ that we already learned?” This sparks the higher-level thinking that’s necessary for deeper learning. Judy shares that it’s also helpful to English learners, who often know what they want to say, but are just not sure how to say it.
There’s talk and then there’s academic talk. With an intentional focus on scientific discourse, KnowAtom’s curriculum supports the kind of discussion that deepens concepts and builds critical thinkers.
Here are some “Talk Moves” that elevate the quality of discourse:
Check out this video for more Talk Moves and other discussion tools that you can easily apply to your own lessons to facilitate producing discussions. In the webinar, Judy delves deeper into her own experience using these tools and techniques with her students.
With KnowAtom’s resources, students take ownership of their own learning. Eventually, they can even begin to facilitate the discussion themselves. “It’s so much fun when I feel like my biggest job as a teacher is pointing out that you just taught someone something so important. That’s worth more than all the chatter coming from me at the front of the room,” Judy says.
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