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NEWS
INDEX
Archives
2005
June
Middle school teachers to
take part in science program at Illinois
Molly McElroy,
News Bureau
217-333-5802; mmcelroy@uiuc.edu
6/1/05
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Click
photo to enlarge |
| Photo
by Kwame Ross |
| Laura
Beach, a May graduate in human development and family
studies in the College of Agricultural, Consumer and
Environmental Sciences and staff member with the Prairie
Flowers science outreach program, displays one of
four global positioning receivers that will be contained
in instructional kits available to teachers in Illinois
middle schools. GPS technology can be used in activities
such as geocaching, a form of treasure hunting, and
ecocaching, which teaches children about the Earth
and its history through visits to natural and historic
sites. |
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
— Advancements
in science education will bloom on the prairie as middle school teachers
from mostly rural Illinois school districts converge at the University
of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign on June 13 to participate in the two-week
Prairie Flowers Program.
Prairie Flowers – with funding from the Howard Hughes Medical
Institute and support from the School
of Integrative Biology and the School
of Molecular and Cellular Biology at Illinois – provides teachers
with training on technology that can be used in the classroom and teaching
strategies to improve students’ attitudes toward science. Teachers
also earn credit toward maintaining their teaching certificates.
Since its inception in 1992, the program has drawn more than 100 teachers
from 56 rural Illinois middle schools to the Urbana-Champaign campus.
By offering continuing education for teachers, Prairie Flowers imparts
scientific knowledge and provides access to equipment to middle school
students otherwise forgotten as potential scientists.
“The Prairie Flowers program helps teachers learn how to get their
students excited about science and coming to the university,”
said Rebecca Adwell, the program’s manager.
This summer’s program will involve 28 participants, including
current and retired teachers, as well as Illinois graduate students
in the master’s of education program and undergraduate pre-service
teachers.
Each morning, participants will gather in 176 Burrill Hall, 407 S. Goodwin
Ave., Urbana, to learn background information for activities in the
afternoons. Participants also will learn about new technology, such
as the Illinois interactive report card, a new online report showing
each school’s results from the Illinois Standards Achievements
Test.
The report card details Illinois schools’ performance in meeting
state education standards by providing an online database showing the
percent of students in each school who meet or exceed ISAT standards
in reading, math and science.
“Prairie Flowers participants will learn how to use the report
card to monitor how their own class compares to others,” Adwell
said. The report card also shows how each school compares with other
schools within the same district and across the state.
Besides learning about new technology each year, teachers develop a
science kit with lesson plans and equipment needed to for experiments
in their classrooms. Participants may check out the kit during the school
year. Over the 13-year lifespan of the program, 30 kits have been made,
covering topics such as astronomy, electricity, plants and weather.
This summer, teachers will make a science kit that teaches global positioning
technology. After learning background information on global positioning
systems, participants will use GPS receivers for self-guided field trips.
The Prairie Flowers Program has four GPS receivers that participants
may check out to use with their classes.
GPS technology has many classroom applications, including geocaching.
According to the official Web site on the sport, geocaching is a type
of treasure hunting that attracts thousands of people across 215 countries.
Students use GPS units to locate items such as books, compact discs,
money and videos left by other geocachers.
A similar application is EcoCaching, an outdoor activity that lets students,
educators and families learn about Earth and its history. EcoCaches
include educational interpretation and information, such as latitude
and longitude, to help find a location. Visitors to EcoCaches get to
see natural and historic sites and how these resources are managed.
They also learn how scientists gather evidence related to the environment.
Middle school classes also have used GPS for lessons in problem solving.
“Sixth grade students at Perkins-Tryon Intermediate School in
Perkins, Okla., used GPS to record the location of each piece of trash
in their school yard,” Adwell said. “They used the data
to decide where to place trash cans.”
This year’s Prairie Flowers participants also will learn to perform
experiments about the properties of matter from representatives of the
American Chemical Society. The chemistry experiments will be part of
training teachers how to teach inquiry-based learning, an approach designed
to increase student learning. “Through inquiry-based learning,
students learn about using multiple approaches to answer the same question,”
Adwell said.
Participating teachers, Adwell said, “become catalysts within
their own schools, ”making a substantial impact on science education
in rural middle schools. The teachers spread their knowledge to other
teachers in their school and encourage other teachers to participate
in the program, she said.
Some teachers even persuade their schools to buy their own scientific
equipment following their experiences with the Prairie Flowers science
kits. “Microscopes are the most commonly purchased piece of scientific
equipment,” Adwell said. “Teachers say that at first they
hesitated to use microscopes, but now they can’t imagine their
classes being without one.”
Prairie Flowers also helps teachers by its idea-sharing network. Participants
use e-mail to communicate with one another after they leave the Illinois
campus. This network eases the isolation felt by science teachers in
rural communities.
In 2002, the Maryland-based Howard Hughes Medical Institute awarded
a four-year, $1.6 million grant to Illinois to provide outreach programs
including Prairie Flowers. HHMI supports outreach programs at 44 universities
with funds ranging from $1.2 million to $2.2 million over four years
for each university.
“A primary strength of the HHMI-funded programs at Illinois is
the extensive and well-managed outreach efforts,” said Andrew
Quon, HHMI program officer of undergraduate science education grants.
“The connections to the outreach initiatives already under way
are very well developed and the collaborative commitments as outlined
are solidly in place.”
“It is clear that this has been a very successful program with
high impact on local middle school teachers, students and school districts,”
Quon said. “Perhaps, more importantly, outreach programs like
Prairie Flowers have the potential to strengthen K-12 science education
nationally.”
For more information on the Prairie Flowers Program or to arrange a
class visit, contact Rebecca Adwell at hall@life.uiuc.edu or 217-244-1984.
-mm-
EDITOR’S
NOTE: This
year’s Prairie Flowers Program participants include Julie Courson
of Mount Zion Intermediate School, Mount Zion; Jan Cunningham of St.
Anthony Grade School, Effingham; Kathy Endres of Iroquois West Upper
Elementary School, Thawville; Christina Field of Meridan Intermediate,
Blue Mound; Jeanette Hickox of Jasper County Junior High, Newton; Jane
Hwang of Canaan Academy, Urbana; Kristi Kestner of Milford Elementary
School, Milford; Wendy Kreke and Amy Oseland of Teutopolis Grade School,
Teutopolis; Chris Lawton of St. Paul School, Danville; Leslie Lloyd
of Brownstown Elementary, Brownstown; Julie Shult of Meadowbrook Elementary,
Forrest; Amy and Troy Simpson and Paul Wilson all of Glenn Raymond Middle
School, Watseka; Cassie Smith of Greenville High School, Greenville;
Jodi Speiser of Pawnee Grade School, Pawnee; Mary Webb of Cerro Gordo
Elementary, Cerro Gordo; Nancy Wheeler of Connor Shaw Center, Peotone.
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