Table of Contents
Introduction ix-xviii
Lawrence B. Flick
Oregon State University
Norman G. Lederman
Illinois Institute of Technology
Scientific Inquiry and Science Teaching
1-14
Rodger W. Bybee
BSCS
Part I: Historical and Contemporary Educational Contexts 15
Historical Perspectives on Inquiry Teaching in Schools
17-35
George E. DeBoer
American Association for the Advancement of Science Project 2061
The Special Role of Science Teaching in Schools Serving Diverse Children in Urban Poverty
37-53
Martin Haberman
University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee
Addressing Disabilities in the Context of Inquiry and Nature of Science Instruction
55-74
Judith Sweeney Lederman
Illinois Institute of Technology
Greg P. Stefanich
University of Northern Iowa
Using Technology to Support Inquiry in Middle School Science
75-101
Ann M. Novak
Greenhills School, Ann Arbor, MI
Joseph S. Krajcik
University of Michigan
Part II: Teaching and Learning Scientific Inquiry 103
The Knowledge Building Enterprises In Science and Elementary School Science Classrooms
105-130
Kathleen E. Metz
University of California, Berkeley
Community, Culture, and Conversation in Inquiry Based Science Instruction
131-155
Shirley J. Magnusson, Annemarie Sullivan Palincsar
University of Michigan
Mark Templin
University of Toledo
Developing Understanding of Scientific Inquiry in Secondary Students
157-172
Lawrence B. Flick
Oregon State University
Inquiry in Science Teacher Education
173-199
Sandra K. Abell
University of Missouri, Columbia
Woodcreek Magnet School for Math, Science, and Technology,
Lansing, MO
Mark J. Volkmann
University of Missouri, Columbia
A Balanced Approach to Science Inquiry Teaching
201-217
William G. Holliday
University of Maryland
Part III: Curriculum and Assessment 219
On the Content of Task-Structured Science Curricula
221-248
Bruce Sherin
Daniel Edelson
Matthew Brown
Northwestern University
Envisioning a Curriculum of Inquiry in the Elementary School
249-261
Sandra K. Abell
University of Missouri, Columbia
James T. McDonald
Central Michigan University
classroom assessment of opportunity to learn science through inquiry
263-297
Edith Gummer
Oregon State University
Audrey Champagne
State University of New York Albany
Part IV: Teaching and Learning About the Nature of Science 299
Syntax of Nature of Science Within Inquiry and Science Instruction
301-317
Norman G. Lederman
Illinois Institute of Technology
Relating History of Science to Learning and Teaching Science: Using and Abusing
319-330
Richard A. Duschl
Rutgers - The State University of New Jersey
Authentic Scientific Inquiry as Context for Teaching Nature of Science: Identifying Critical Elements for Success
331-355
Renee S. Schwartz
Western Michigan University
Barbara A. Crawford
Cornell University
Inquiry Learning in College Classrooms: For the Times, They Are, A Changing
357-387
Harry L. Shipman
University of Delaware
Over and Over and Over Again: College Students' Views of Nature of Science
389-425
Fouad Abd-El-Khalick
University of Illinois
Perusing Pandora's Box: Exploring the What, When, and How of Nature of Science Instruction
427-446
Randy L. Bell
University of Virginia
index
447-452