What’s science?
Science courses nearly extinct in elementary grades, study finds
Nanette Asimov, Chronicle Staff Writer
sfgate.com
The third-graders looked puzzled when asked what they liked best about science. No answer.
OK, then, next question: “What is science?” a visitor asked the children in a hallway at Bessie Carmichael Elementary School in San Francisco.
“Science is like art,” said Manuel, 7, who let that cryptic response hang in the air as he ducked away.
He might have meant that both can open the heart to beauty. Or maybe he was saying that science, like art, is something students don’t get much of these days in elementary school.
If it were the latter, a new survey of 923 Bay Area elementary school teachers would agree.
About 80 percent of those teachers said they spent less than an hour each week teaching science, according to researchers from the Lawrence Hall of Science at UC Berkeley and from WestEd, an education think tank based in San Francisco.
In contrast, a national study seven years ago found elementary school science instruction averaged more than two hours per week, said Rena Dorph, the lead researcher on the new study.
“It’s alarming because it’s a very short amount of time per week dedicated to a subject that’s considered a core subject in schools,” said Dorph, who is director of the Center for Research, Evaluation and Assessment at the Lawrence Hall of Science. (more…)
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