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Science Education Program Science Education Program TEACH SCIENCE - IMPACT THE FUTURE

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TEACH SCIENCE - IMPACT THE FUTURE. Why Consider Teaching as a Career?. Why Teachers Teach. What Teachers Say . . . and the % Who Say It Teaching is work they love to do 96% They would choose teaching again if starting over 80% Teaching is a lifelong choice 75% - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: TEACH SCIENCE  -  IMPACT THE FUTURE

Science Education ProgramScience Education Program

TEACH SCIENCE - IMPACT THE FUTURE

Page 2: TEACH SCIENCE  -  IMPACT THE FUTURE

Science Education ProgramScience Education Program

Why Consider Teaching as a Career?

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Science Education Program

WHY TEACHERS TEACHWhat Teachers Say . . . and the % Who Say It

• Teaching is work they love to do– 96%

• They would choose teaching again if starting over– 80%

• Teaching is a lifelong choice– 75%

• They get a lot of satisfaction out of teaching– 68%

• They fell into teaching by chance– 16%

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Science Education Program

INTRINSIC REASONS FOR TEACHING(internal psychic satisfactions, as personal accomplishment or joy of work)

• Joy of seeing students learn• Performing a significant social service• Fellow teachers/colleagues relationships• Work you love to do• Work gives sense you are respected and appreciated• Time to spend with family • Potential to affect the lives of others• Love of subject taught• Lifelong learning opportunities

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EXTRINSIC REASONS FOR TEACHING(public, external attractions of an occupation, such as money, prestige, and power)

• Salaries – $45,000 - $95,000 range + benefits and improving• Status – positive but sometimes difficult to discern• Power – unique power over students• Work Schedule – “June, July, and August”

– two semesters of 18 weeks plus 10 teacher work days– 185 days total compared to 260 M-F in one year

• Benefits – retirement, health/dental/vision, low interest loans• Job Security – tenure after two years• Opportunities for Increased Pay – pay scale (% each year and

additional step on pay scale)• Opportunities for Advancement – curriculum specialist,

department chair, counselor, assistant principal, principal, superintendent

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SAMPLE SALARY SCHEDULES• Anaheim Union High School District

– has a student population of approximately 37,000, including Adult Education. The District covers 46 square miles and stretches across the cities of Anaheim, Cypress, Buena Park, La Palma and Stanton. Our students, who speak 49 different languages in their homes, attend 23 campuses and come to us from five feeder elementary districts

– $49,436 for BA + 30 (Certificated Salary Schedule 07-08)• Capistrano Unified School District

– $ 48,499 for BA + 30 (Certificated Salary Schedule 07-08)• Mountain View-Los Altos Union High School District

– 20 miles north of San Jose and 45 miles south of San Francisco; student population of 3,683 students of which 55% are Caucasian and 45% are students of color

– $57,094 for BA+30 (Certificated Salary Schedule 07-08)

Be a Science Teacher Presentation 6

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FINANCIAL RESOURCES AVAILABLE WHILE EARNING A CREDENTIAL

• Got loans? If not, get some! The Assumption Program of Loans for Education (APLE) assumes up to $19,000 in outstanding educational loan balances in return for four consecutive years of teaching science.– http://aple.csusuccess.org/scholarship

• Science teachers may earn their credential while fully employed in the public schools.– http://ed.fullerton.edu/SecEd/Professional_Track_Program/Index.ht

m

Be a Science Teacher Presentation 7

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Science Education ProgramScience Education Program

Why Teach Science?

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Science Education Program

SCIENCE TEACHERS SHAPE STUDENTS LIVES AND IMPACT SOCIETY

Click on the image to see a short presentation by Dave, a middle school science teacher. He teaches several grades and covers many science topics, covering things like earth science, living things, astronomy, and more. In this presentation, he is working with sixth graders to investigate electricity.

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Science Education Program

SCIENCE TEACHERS INFLUENCE THE FUTURE

• Teachers influence the science literacy of the general population, who become voting citizens, leaders, and decision-makers of our society.

• Elementary teachers prepare and influence the students who enter (or don’t enter) high school science classes.

• High school science teachers prepare and influence the students who enter (or don’t enter) university science programs.

• University faculty help prepare and influence future teachers and scientists.

• Future teachers go back to influence students and the cycle continues. • Thus the future of both science and our society depends on our

science teachers. Be a Science Teacher Presentation 11

Adapted from APS Forum on Education

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Science Education Program

TOP 25 QUESTIONS FACING SCIENCE OVER THE NEXT 25 YEARS

• What Is the Universe Made Of?• What is the Biological Basis of Consciousness?• Why Do Humans Have So Few Genes?• To What Extent Are Genetic Variation and

Personal Health Linked?• Can the Laws of Physics Be Unified?• How Much Can Human Life Span Be Extended?• What Controls Organ Regeneration?• How Can a Skin Cell Become a Nerve Cell?• How Does a Single Somatic Cell Become a Whole

Plant?• How Does Earth's Interior Work?• Are We Alone in the Universe?• How and Where Did Life on Earth Arise?• What Determines Species Diversity?• What Genetic Changes Made Us Uniquely

Human?• How Are Memories Stored and Retrieved?• How Did Cooperative Behavior Evolve?• How Will Big Pictures Emerge from a Sea of

Biological Data?• How Far Can We Push Chemical Self-Assembly?• What Are the Limits of Conventional Computing?• Can We Selectively Shut Off Immune Responses?• Do Deeper Principles Underlie Quantum

Uncertainty and Nonlocality?• Is an Effective HIV Vaccine Feasible?• How Hot Will the Greenhouse World Be?• What Can Replace Cheap Oil -- and When?• Will Malthus Continue to Be Wrong?

Be a Science Teacher Presentation 12

BE A SCIENCE TEACHERPREPARE THE MINDS THAT DISCOVER THE ANSWERS

See the Top 125 Questions of the 21st Century in Science http://www.sciencemag.org/sciext/125th/

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Science Education ProgramScience Education Program

What are the Steps to Earning a Teaching

Credential?

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Science Education Program

TEACHING SCIENCE IN CALIFORNIA – SINGLE SUBJECT CREDENTIAL

• To earn a secondary science teaching credential, candidates must – demonstrate subject matter competency and – complete a program of professional preparation.

• The California Commission on Teacher Credentialing authorizes eight different science credentials for teaching in grades 7-12.– Each credential requires demonstration of subject matter competence through completion of

specific undergraduate or graduate degrees OR successful passage of several subtests of the California Science Examination for Teachers (CSET) in Science.

– Candidates with a regular credential in a science area are authorized to teach in their specific discipline as well as general and integrated science, including middle school science.

– Candidates with a Specialized credential in a science area are authorized to teach only in their specific discipline.

– A new credential in GENERAL SCIENCE will be available in 2009. Subject matter requirements for this credential are in process of development.

• The most common route to subject matter competency is a major in a specific discipline and passage of the appropriate CSETs.

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Be a Science Teacher Presentation 15

REVIEW THE SMPP FOR YOUR CONTENT AREA

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CREDENTIAL PROGRAM COURSEWORK: PREREQUISITES

Be a Science Teacher Presentation 19

• PREREQUISITES:– EDSC 310: The Teaching Experience: Participation (3)

– Includes 40 hours of observations in secondary schools– EDSC 320: Adolescence and Education (3) (GE)– EDSC 330: Developing Literacy in Secondary Schools (3)– EDSC 340: Student Diversity in Secondary Schools (3)

– RECOMMENDED PRIOR TO STARTING CREDENTIAL PROGRAM:– EDSC 304: Personal Proficiency Educational Technology (3)

• PRESERVICE COURSES REQUIRED OF ALL INTERN CANDIDATES:– EDSC 400: Methods for Internship Credential Candidates (3) – EDSC 410: Teaching English Learners in Secondary Schools (3)

ALL PREREQ AND PRESERVICE COURSES ARE OFFERED WEB DURING

FALL, INTERSESSION, SPRING, AND SUMMER

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CREDENTIAL PROGRAM COURSEWORKEXTERN SEMESTER (FIRST SEMESTER)

– Seminar Courses– EDSC 304: Personal Proficiency Educational Technology (3) (if not taken)– EDSC 440S: General Pedagogy of Secondary School Teaching (4)– SCED 442: Teaching Science in Secondary Schools (3)

– Fieldwork Courses– EDSC 440F: Supervised Fieldwork in Secondary Schools (2)– SCED 449E: Externship in Secondary Teaching– Science (3)– 3 periods daily in science classrooms– graduate induction into student teaching– From observing, taking roll, facilitating small group work, grading student work, and

teaching individual lesson to managing weeks of instruction– Teaching Performance Assessment

– Task 1 Subject-Specific Pedagogy– Task 2 Planning for Instruction

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CREDENTIAL PROGRAM COURSEWORKSTUDENT TEACHER SEMESTER (SECOND SEMESTER)

• Seminar Courses– SCED 449S: Seminar in Secondary Teaching—Science(3)

• Fieldwork Courses– SCED 449I: Internship in Secondary Teaching-Science (10)– Teach 3 periods of science daily for 18 weeks

• Teaching Performance Assessment– EDSC 460: Teaching Assessment Seminar (3) – Task 3 Assessing Student Learning– Task 4 Culminating Experience

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WHY CHOOSE CSUF FOR YOUR SINGLE SUBJECT SCIENCE CREDENTIAL PROGRAM?

PROGRAM QUALITY• We are the first choice of Orange County district administrators and principals.• Programs are nationally accredited by the National Council on Teacher Education (NCATE).• Candidates complete the California Teaching Performance Assessment and prepare an

Individualized Induction Plan for their employing district.RELEVANT CURRICULUM AND FIELDWORK• Field-based program allows students to apply theory to practice in classroom settings. • Methods courses and supervision are content specific.• Intern program allows qualified candidates to earn their credential while employed as teachers.INNOVATIVE USE OF TECHNOLOGIES TO SUPPORT TEACHING AND LEARNING• Students complete the Intel® Teach to the Future program during EDSC 304/307. • Faculty and students use innovative technologies, including Web 2.0 tools, Blackboard, podcasting,

video streaming, online thinking tools, and audience response systems.• Science teacher candidates receive a laptop for use during their student teaching experience.FACULTY AND LOCAL PARTNERSHIPS• Program faculty are involved in our neighboring schools, collaborating with teachers to improve

policy and practice. They have published numerous articles; obtained millions of dollars in annually funded grants; and are recognized regionally, nationally, and internationally.

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Science Education ProgramScience Education Program

What Science Would You Teach?

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WHAT GUIDES SCIENCE INSTRUCTION IN CALIFORNIA?

California Science Framework This is the blueprint for how to teach science, containing information about:

– Education Reform– Science Instruction and Instructional Materials– Professional Preparation of Science Teachers

Science Content Standards – California has identified and adopted academic content

standards for kindergarten through grade twelve.– These standards are designed to ensure that all students have

a rich experience in science at every grade level and that curriculum, builds on previous learning.

– See these standards by grade level at: http://www.cde.ca.gov/be/st/ss/scmain.asp

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CA MIDDLE SCHOOL SCIENCE

• 6th Grade: Focus on Earth Science– Plate Tectonics and Earth’s Structure, Shaping Earth’s Surface, Heat, Energy

in the Earth System, Ecology, Resources, Investigation and Experimentation• 7th Grade: Focus on Life Science

– Cell Biology, Genetics, Evolution, Earth and Life History, Structure and Function in Living Systems, Physical Principles in Living Systems, Investigation and Experimentation

• 8th Grade: Focus on Physical Science– Forces, Motion, Structure of Matter, Earth in the Solar System, Reactions,

Chemistry of Living Systems, Periodic Table, Density and Buoyancy, Investigation and Experimentation

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CA HIGH SCHOOL SCIENCE• Physics

– Motion and Forces, Conservation of Energy and Momentum, Heat and Thermodynamics, Waves, Electric and Magnetic Phenomena, Investigation and Experimentation

• Chemistry– Atomic and Molecular Structure, Chemical Bonds, Conservation of Matter and

Stoichiometry, Gases and Their Properties, Acids and Bases, Solutions, Chemical Thermodynamics, Reaction Rates, Organic Chemistry and Biochemistry, Nuclear Processes , Investigation and Experimentation

• Biology/Life Sciences– Cell Biology, Genetics, Ecology, Evolution, Physiology , Investigation and Experimentation

• Earth Sciences– Earth’s Place in the Universe, Dynamic Earth Processes, Energy in the Earth System,

Biogeochemical Processes, Structure and Composition of the Atmosphere, California Geology , Investigation and Experimentation

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WHAT SCIENCE DO WE TEACH AND WHY?

Many organizations have an opinion about what science we should teach. For example:

– Science for All Americans: The American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS) founded Project 2061 in 1985 to help all Americans become literate in science, mathematics, and technology.

– ACS Education: The American Chemical Society is just one example of subject-specific organizations that offer curriculum and instructional resources for teaching society.

– NSTA Teacher Resources: The goal of the National Science Teachers Association is to promote excellence and innovation in science teaching and learning for all.

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AMERICAN PHYSICS SOCIETY

• Website for Students and Educators

• Color Me Physics Coloring Book• Physics to Go

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GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OF AMERICA

• Education and Teacher Resources Website

• Why Earth Science brochure• Nature of Science and Scientific Metho

d• Understanding Climate Change

presentations and videos

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AMERICAN INSTITUTE OF BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES

• Resources for Teaching and Learning

• The Butterfly Project• Actionbioscience.org

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What are Your Next Steps?

32Be a Science Teacher Presentation

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YOUR “TO DO” LIST• Demonstrate subject matter competency by through SMPP coursework or by

passing the appropriate California Subject Examination (CSET) subtests.– See www.cset.nesinc.com

• Demonstrate basic skills by passing the CBEST. – See www.cbest.nesinc.com

• Complete required prerequisite coursework.• Attend a Single Subject Credential Program overview.

– See http://ed.fullerton.edu/adtep/EDSCoverviews.htm.

• Change your objective or apply to the university.– See www.csumentor.edu

• Apply to the Single Subject Credential Program. – See http://ed.fullerton.edu/adtep/ – Deadlines: February 28 for Fall semester entrance and September 30 for Spring semester entrance

• Get ready for a life-changing experience!

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NSTA CAREER CENTER• There are many things you can do to prepare for a career as a science teacher before you enter the classroom. Whether you are still a student or you are an adult seeking to enter the field, now is the time for you to begin building skills related to teaching, management, and organization.

• See suggestions and resources at: http://careers.nsta.org/advice_planning.asp

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ADVISEMENT RESOURCES

• Center for Careers in Teaching – www.fullerton.edu/cct/

• Science Education Program Website– http://nsm.fullerton.edu/scied/

• Science Education Program Wiki– http://mast.wikispaces.com

• Science Education Office – MH-527, 714-278-2307

• Science Education Program Director– Dr. Vikki Costa ([email protected] )

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ADDITIONAL INFORMATION• Why Teach?

– http://www.recruitingteachers.org/channels/clearinghouse/whyteach/default1.htm • I love Teaching

– http://www.iloveteaching.com - designed to encourage new teachers• New Teacher.com

– http://www.new-teacher.com -designed to inspire those considering teaching).• Occupational Outlook Handbook – Information on Teaching

– http://stats.bls.gov/oco/ocos069.htm - the site offers extensive information on the nature of teaching, the employment picture, working conditions, and the job outlook

• Career Planning for Teachers– http://careerplanning.about.com/library/weekly/aa030901d.htm - describes the nature of

teaching• Status of the American Public School Teacher

– http://www.nea.org/edstats/images/status.pdf - snapshot of the profession today in a historical perspective

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YEAR OF SCIENCE 2009

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Click on image to go to Website.