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Suggested Citation:"East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana." National Academy of Sciences. 1997. Science for All Children: A Guide to Improving Elementary Science Education in Your School District. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4964.
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Page 153
Suggested Citation:"East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana." National Academy of Sciences. 1997. Science for All Children: A Guide to Improving Elementary Science Education in Your School District. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4964.
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Page 154
Suggested Citation:"East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana." National Academy of Sciences. 1997. Science for All Children: A Guide to Improving Elementary Science Education in Your School District. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4964.
×
Page 155
Suggested Citation:"East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana." National Academy of Sciences. 1997. Science for All Children: A Guide to Improving Elementary Science Education in Your School District. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4964.
×
Page 156
Suggested Citation:"East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana." National Academy of Sciences. 1997. Science for All Children: A Guide to Improving Elementary Science Education in Your School District. Washington, DC: The National Academies Press. doi: 10.17226/4964.
×
Page 157

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East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana Corporate Partnership and an Emphasis on Strong Professional Development Spearhead Reform Efforts The East Baton Rouge Parish School System includes 64 K-5 elementary schools. There are approximately 40,000 students and 1,200 teachers in those schools. East Baton Rouge's science program has focused on profes- sional development and devising effective assessments of student learning. The program has been strengthened by a corporate partnership with the Dow Chemical Company. Sheila Emonet, a fourth-grade teacher at Lanier Elementary School, is a 1995 Presidential Award recipient who has earned national recognition for excellence in teaching science. Around East Baton Rouge, however, she's best known as the teacher who "does those bones." A second-grade unit on bones and skeletons may be Emonet's greatest claim to local fame, but her interest in inquiry-based sci- ence is broad and long-standing. Mignon Morgan, science special- ist for the parish, cites Emonet as a pioneer in science education re- form in the area. Long before science kits became available, Emonet was bringing materials into her science classroom to spark students' interest. Asked to describe the strength of hands-on learn- ing, she says, "It's not just me giving you information. Instead, the idea is 'Let's learn together.' I make the learning mine as well." Emonet has taught for 10 years. Across the parish at Tanglewood Elementary School, Clydette Rispone, who has taught for five years, was also a hands-on science teacher in the days when enterprising teachers made their own science kits. She found teaching materials 153

Inquiry-Centered Science in Practice just about everywhere; for example, she collected seashells at neigh- borhood garage sales. On her first clay as a student teacher, she prompted a brainstorming activity for a new module on Water Ail; and Weather by bringing a fighting fish to class. Why take the trouble? "Hands-on activities," she states with conviction, "bring science to life." Good Teachers: Born or Made? The enterprising spirit of Emonet and Rispone might make it am pear that good teachers are born, not made. While some traits may be innate, every teacher needs support and ongoing learning oh portunities. For this reason, Morgan speaks with special pricle of the parish's staff development program. All teachers must have at least three hours of experiential training with a new science moclule be- fore they can check the kit out of the Science Resource Center. That training is proviclec3 by master teachers from the system's own staff. "For the first two years that we used the kits," Morgan recalls, "we invited in company representatives or other professionals. They made wonderful presentations. The teachers were enthusi- ast~c. But three weeks later, they'd come to me and say, 'Mignon, I'm not sure I can do it myself."' As a result, the training for each module in East Baton Rouge to clay is done by teachers who have used the kit at least once in their own classrooms. Approximately 10 teachers attend each of the day-Ion" sessions. It's a thorough process. 'bile start," Morgan notes, "by opening the box." Working in pairs or groups, the teach- ers go through every activity in the module. They not only learn about the kits, they also have an opportunity to network with other teachers in their school system. Equally important, they meet a local resource person to whom they can turn when questions arise. Another component of staff c3 evelopment is provided through a five-year Teacher Enhancement Grant from the Nation- al Science Foundation (NSF). The grant, awarded in 1993, targets teachers in kindergarten through third grade and focuses on the physical sciences. Through this program, the parish has developed a cadre of 32 mentor teachers in 16 schools. During the summer of 1993, the mentor candidates, which included Rispone, earned graduate credit in physical science. Once the school year began, a team of science specialists, including a consultant in assessment, 154

East Baton Rouge Pansh, Louisiana visited their classrooms weekly to mocle] effective teaching en cl to provide feedback to the mentors-in-training. The teachers also at- tended monthly seminars at the Science Resource Center. The same basic framework, consisting of summer graduate work and training during the school year, continued in 1993-94. To launch the second phase of this capacity-building effort, the system selected 34 lead teachers in 1995. After two weeks of summer training, each lead teacher was paired with a mentor teacher at the same gracle level in another school. The two teach- ers then continuer! to work together for an entire year. The men- tors model effective teaching practices; the lead teachers try out new techniques and receive feedback. "Our Whole Thinking Has Changed" For Rispone, participation in the mentoring program was an irre- placeable experience. "Our mincis work differently," she says. "Our whole thinking has changed." Student assessment is one area where changes in thinking are most evident. Although hard data on student achievement are still being collected and analyzed for purposes of the NSF grant, teach- ers see the advantages of hancls-on learning almost claily. Emonet's experience with assessment has revealer! "obvious dif- ferences" between hancls-on science and traditional textbook science. Students who have engaged in hands-on learning are more enthusi- astic and have more positive attitudes toward science. Differences in written test results are less dramatic. Nonetheless, hands-on science is miles aheacl of the game. 'We're doing more wnting," Emonet ex- plains, "and the students have to recorc! results and write in their journals when they study electricity. In a hands-on classroom," she quickly adcls, "the students also have to construct an electric switch." Cooperation with the Dow Chemical Company The Dow Chemical Company, a major employer in East Baton Rouge, has been instrumental in the progress achieved in the sys- tem in both science and mathematics. As Morgan puts it, "They've been tremendous." Dow offered an initial $15,000 grant to East Baton Rouge in 1992. The company made a commitment to provide $40,000 annually for the next five years to purchase and refurbish 155

Inquiry-Centered Science in Practice science kits en cl to provide other learning resources. Sue Blanchard, Dow's training coordinator for human resources, was a member of the four-person team that attended the National Science Resources Center (NSRC) Elementary Leadership Institute in 1992, and she remains actively involved in the program. Accountability is an im- portant feature of the successful relationship that has been estate fished between Dow en cl school district leaclers, she notes. The school submits an activity report to the corporate offices yearly, and progress is jointly evaluated. The groundwork for such collaboration began in the early l990s, when Dow, Exxon Corporation, and Louisiana State Universi- ty (LSU) formed a public-private alliance for the purpose of pre- venting overlap in corporate support for school programs. Repre- sentatives of Shell Oil Company, E thy] Corporation, and the local chamber of commerce soon joined the alliance. Today, the alliance is working with 10 of the state's 64 parishes. Alliance members meet with science en c! math supervisors monthly. The result, Blanchard notes with satisfaction, is that "we're beginning to see much more co- operation among the school districts." If, for example, there are one or two unfilled spots in a training program offered by East Baton Rouge, teachers from West Baton Rouge and Iberville Parishes are invited to fill them. These "win-win" arrangements ensure that staff development is as cost-effective as possible. The alliance is also ex- -ploring the use of the Internet and America Online for staff training. LSU's Louisiana Energy and Environmental Resources and Tn- formation Center (LEERIC) has played an active role in science edu- cation reform in the system and throughout the state. LEERTC staff member Emily Young was a member of the 1992 NSRC Leadership Institute team. LEERTC functioned as the materials center for three parishes during the first year of the program, and it continues to serve West Baton Rouge and Iberville. LEERIC staff provide supplementary teaching materials on request. They also provide a custom-made list of resource books, trade books, and videotapes in each science kit. A Balancing Act Maintaining a large and rapidly growing program with multiple funding sources requires the creative use of resources. For exam- ple, the NSF grant provides training for teachers in grades K-3 156

East Baton Rouge Parish, Louisiana only, so the system must find additional support for training of a similarly high caliber for fourth- and fifth-gracle teachers. More- over, the NSF grant covers only the physical sciences, yet the sci- ence curriculum already includes earth and life sciences. Having a major role in ensuring that resources are well allo- cated en cl gaps are overcome is Lola Soileau, science supervisor and principal investigator for the NSF grant. Soileau is an advocate for elementary school science with the board of education, which allocates funds to cover the cost of kits and supplies that exceed the resources provicled by Dow. In a time of fiscal constraints, Soileau and her staff must balance science education reform goals with a close of realism. "It may not happen in five years," she admits. But it waR happen. Signs of progress are everywhere. One in four elementary school teachers has been trained in at least one sci- ence module, and four different hands-on modules are being used at each gracle level. The Science Resource Center is swamped with re- quests; each kit is used four or five times yearly. At the halfway point of its five-year plan, the East Baton Rouge system has made major strides in implementing elementary science education reform. ~ ~ _'' ~ ~ Em__ At. . ~ ~, ~ I_ ·-i ~ ~_~ Local teachers understand their colleagues' needs. Appropriately trained, they are often more effective in leading staff development is, programs than are publishers' sales representatives. Mentoring programs that match a lead teacher with a less-experi- enced teacher in the same school are a practical and effective means of promoting individual teacher development. Alliances between the public and private sectors, especially when they benefit from a strong corporate presence, can be instrumental in promoting science education reform.

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Remember the first time you planted a seed and watched it sprout? Or explored how a magnet attracted a nail? If these questions bring back memories of joy and wonder, then you understand the idea behind inquiry-based science—an approach to science education that challenges children to ask questions, solve problems, and develop scientific skills as well as gain knowledge. Inquiry-based science is based on research and experience, both of which confirm that children learn science best when they engage in hands-on science activities rather than read from a textbook.

The recent National Science Education Standards prepared by the National Research Council call for a revolution in science education. They stress that the science taught must be based on active inquiry and that science should become a core activity in every grade, starting in kindergarten. This easy-to-read and practical book shows how to bring about the changes recommended in the standards. It provides guidelines for planning and implementing an inquiry-based science program in any school district.

The book is divided into three parts. "Building a Foundation for Change," presents a rationale for inquiry-based science and describes how teaching through inquiry supports the way children naturally learn. It concludes with basic guidelines for planning a program.

School administrators, teachers, and parents will be especially interested in the second part, "The Nuts and Bolts of Change." This section describes the five building blocks of an elementary science program:

  • Community and administrative support.
  • A developmentally appropriate curriculum.
  • Opportunities for professional development.
  • Materials support.
  • Appropriate assessment tools.

Together, these five elements provide a working model of how to implement hands-on science.

The third part, "Inquiry-Centered Science in Practice," presents profiles of the successful inquiry-based science programs in districts nationwide. These profiles show how the principles of hands-on science can be adapted to different school settings.

If you want to improve the way science is taught in the elementary schools in your community, Science for All Children is an indispensable resource.

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