Welcome to my class. I enjoy the study of Science and value it more when I see my students make connections to Science in their own lives. I want you to know exactly what you’re getting into! I’d like you to understand the following important things before we begin our Science classwork together:
- How this curriculum fits into our school
- What my personal curriculum is
- What I want for you to get out of this class
An educator who was interested in hands-on learning was John Dewey, who wrote on these topics about 100 years ago. Dewey wrote that we lose sight of how interesting and vital our world really is, when we focus too much on memorizing facts and symbols about reality, but miss out on what is right in front of us. Dewey says that the "way out" for us as educators to "psychologize" content, in order to bring it into life-terms for our students. In other words, making school interesting for students is the teacher’s responsibility - I will not let you down in this respect. One of the most important things that Dewey wrote about is how curriculum is a guide for us; it represents what some students and teachers may accomplish together. So, I’ll work hard for you with whatever Science background you have, from an insect expert to the student who doesn’t like to set foot outside.
In his 2011 State of the Union Address, Barack Obama said, “In South Korea, teachers are known as nation builders.” I have started to think of the work we do in school as that of building a real world for students. Our values and worlds as educators collectively become those of you, our students. So we have a really important job as educators. RW Tyler writes about how educators can create a world for students: “The teacher's method of controlling the learning experience is through the manipulation of the environment in such a way as to set up stimulating situations.” To broaden the role of the job, a teacher is someone who manipulates the environment in a way to set up stimulating situations. I think there are teachers everywhere, such as on my podcasts: Radiolab, This American Life, and Planet Money. There are also teachers on the television shows I watch: The Daily Show, Anderson Cooper, and the Big Bang Theory - you might get extra credit with a well-placed “Bazinga” from the PhD Physicist Sheldon Cooper on the Big Bang Theory.
Another educator, one who has written about the characteristics of successful schools writes that the history of the world was at least as complicated as the history of her family. I think Deborah Meier is so insightful, because all of us know how complicated our families are: the interpersonal dynamics, the history and the tradition. These things are difficult for anyone but someone in the family to understand. So, of course human history is infinitely more complicated than that of our own families, but we act, and teach, as if the opposite were true. How complicated are those topics you’ll encounter in this class? Very. How concise and simple do they sometimes appear? Very. I want to respect you by telling you that I don’t even begin to know most of the content in Science or Biology. If you have the chance to teach me about some aspect of Science you will become my teacher. Learning and teaching about Science is a very complicated matter and I appreciate your help.
Since living together means we have to make sacrifices so that we all benefit, I believe school should be the ground-floor of our society. School can be the tool that points us in the right direction as individuals and a group. So, schools are important to the extent that a society is interested in involving all of its citizens for their and society's benefit. School should seek to serve each individual with the aim of their satisfying engagement with society in their school years and adulthood. I want you to be a happy and successful adult, nothing less. I promise that I won’t give up on you until you’ve achieved your goals in my class and in school - period.
A role model of mine is the mysteriously-named Science Teacher Doyle who blogs at a website by the same name. He wrote about a trip his class took to the beach: "For at least one day, I do not fret over my biggest classroom fear--killing curiosity." Perhaps when school can seem so muddled, being outside in nature can cast away our fears about test scores and grades. My aim is to engage you to the extent that you grow into a successful adult. So much of that transformation is necessarily personal and silent. If you work very hard in my class, I don’t think you will need to worry about your grade. So cast away your fears and engage with Science, at least in my class, and at least for a day.
Rules are an attempt to contain and constrict the world; this is not a bad thing. If an impulsive person discovers the way of reality through intuition, then rule-bound one has already discovered reality in his or her own way: rules are a way to maintain and even tend for that discovery. So rules must come from the pure discovery of truth in order to be effective. In other words, rules must be born of the reality of my classroom and my students if they’re to be effective. What do my students need? That is the question to which rules are addressed. Thus a rule is neutral: it’s purpose is to maintain the world we live in, in which some truth is already established. Rules maintain the positive as well as the negative aspects of the world. Again, what do my students need? You will find on the front door, at the front of the classroom, by my desk, and on my website the five rules I’ve asked you to follow. Each of these rules comes from making sure your needs are respected as an individual in my class.
- Respect your peers and your teacher
- Come to class prepared and ready to learn
- Have a positive attitude
- Be safe and responsible in your actions
- Take responsibility for your education
I have to create review guides for you that cover the material mandated by the North Carolina Department of Education. If I create a worksheet directly from the North Carolina Standard Course of Study it would be a disaster for our classes. If I teach exclusively to the life-terms of students, they will fail to develop into the adults we want them to become. But, if I recant a standardized list of important terms and ideas in Biology, I’ll fail to gain your attention. I must strike a balance between the ideal of the North Carolina Standard Course of Study - because the curriculum represents what we are capable of, not necessarily what we’ll do - and the down-to-Earth reality of our classes. So I make a worksheet that covers the content in the Standard Course of Study, but in a manner which is somehow acceptable and pleasing to students. Any other way will be uneasy and not acceptable to my students and me.
The website Study Bio! (www.studybio.com) has been one of my most meaningful creations as a young teacher. In its smaller terms, Study Bio! presents Biology content material in a way that is aesthetically pleasing. In its larger meaning Study Bio! presents the material from the North Carolina Standard Course of Study in Biology in a way that you’re are adept at accessing. Study Bio! attempts to grant you a view and a walk into the world a technologically-adept adult occupies. You will checkin through Google Docs and complete quizzes, choose between options make something interesting in an Evolution Webquest, and finally design a complicated and beautiful Newspaper on Organisms you researched, using articles you and your peers wrote and compiled online. It is group learning and the type of work you may be expected to complete in college. Much of the work you do toward their Organism Newspaper I designed with what I love in mind.
I hope you have learned about how this Science curriculum fits into our school, my personal curriculum, and what I want you to get our of this class. My primary goal is for you to feel empowered; Science is the process of learning about the world, but it is also a process about learning about ourselves. Being able to know how a flower grows or to explain to your parents what you understand about Genetics is incredible. These types of experiences in Science can help you to understand and explain your experience in every subject, while you’re here for school and after you leave. I wish you success during our time together. Please feel free to contact me at any time before, during, or after this course if I can assist you.
Sincerely,
Mr. Joshua M. Rosenberg
Sincerely,
Mr. Joshua M. Rosenberg
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