Teachers Nationwide Now Have Access to Open-Source Science Curriculum

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8/29/2019

Teachers Nationwide Now Have Access to Open-Source Science Curriculum - Education Week

Teachers Nationwide Now Have Access to Open-Source Science Curriculum By Sarah Schwartz August 28, 2019

When Susan McClarty’s district made the switch to open educational resources, the 6th and 7th grade science teacher at Centennial Middle School in Broken Arrow, Okla., initially struggled to find quality materials aligned with the Next Generation Science Standards. “We were kind of wading through water, trying to create something out of nothing,” she said.

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But last school year, her school participated in a field test for a new, open-source middle grades science curriculum: OpenSciEd. The units were easy to use and emphasized handson discovery, she said, and using them took the pressure off of teachers to shape a coherent curriculum. McClarty is one of the many teachers who have found it difficult to find materials that answer the NGSS’ call for science instruction based on questioning and discovery. Now, OpenSciEd is slowly rolling out one of the first full, OER curricula that claims alignment to these standards. Three units are currently available to the public: 6th grade thermal energy, 7th grade metabolic reactions, and 8th grade sound waves. All three were rated high quality by the peer review panel at Achieve, a nonprofit organization that helped states write the NGSS. OpenSciEd, backed by funders including the Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation and the Carnegie Corporation of New York, plans to release the remaining units in groups of three every six months. The full sequence is projected to be out by winter 2022. Twenty states and D.C. have adopted the NGSS since they were unveiled in 2013. The standards flip the traditional model of science on its head: Instead of memorizing facts, students ask questions about why the world around them works the way it does. Through this questioning, students discover the principles of science that explain these phenomena. For example: the OpenSciEd unit on sound waves doesn’t start by explaining what a sound wave is. Instead, it asks a question: Why do car windows vibrate when the stereo is turned up? NGSS still requires teachers to cover content: physical science, life science, earth and space science, and engineering. But lessons are also supposed to draw connections between these subjects, exploring big ideas about the way science works. These “crosscutting concepts” include themes like cause and effect, systems, and patterns.

https://www.edweek.org/ew/articles/2019/08/28/teachers-nationwide-now-have-access-to-open-source.html?print=1

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