As science educators look at the Next Generation Science Standards, some experts and fellow teachers have a piece of advice: Don鈥檛 forget to read鈥攁nd reread鈥攖he .
While the standards are often described as a 鈥渢echnical document,鈥 the framework, published in 2011, is an accessible narrative that not only served as a blueprint for the standards, but also explains the ideas behind them, makes the case for why they are needed, and says what they aim to accomplish.
鈥淭eachers need to have their hands on that framework because it is very helpful,鈥 said Denise M. Truver, a 3rd grade teacher at Walter E. Ranger Elementary School in Tiverton, R.I., who has been engaged in professional development to better understand the new standards.
鈥淭he framework has kind of been our bible during this work,鈥 she said. 鈥淚 think it鈥檚 an amazing text.鈥 She added: 鈥淚t gives me a ton of background content knowledge, while it also gives me what students should know at the end of each grade span.鈥
The congressionally chartered NRC assembled an 18-member panel of experts in science and science education to craft the framework, led by Helen R. Quinn, a professor emeritus of physics at Stanford University.
鈥淭he standards themselves are best understood in the context of the framework, so those two documents should be traveling the world together,鈥 said Philip Bell, a professor of the learning sciences at the University of Washington in Seattle, who served on the NRC panel.
The document isn鈥檛 billed just as a guide for the standards, but also as an aid for curriculum designers, assessment developers, state and district administrators, leaders in science teacher education, and science educators in 鈥渋nformal settings.鈥
Its 13 chapters cover a lot of terrain, from guiding assumptions to a careful explanation of the three dimensions of the standards: science and engineering practices, cross-cutting concepts, and disciplinary core ideas. It also devotes a chapter to implementation issues.
鈥淪tandards provide a vision for teaching and learning, but the vision cannot be realized unless the standards permeate the education system and guide curriculum, instruction, teacher preparation and professional development, and student assessment,鈥 it says.
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