Teaching and Learning Science
Teaching and Learning Science
Very few textbooks today use a scientific inquiry approach to learning although this is the
process we want to model if we want to “do” science like scientists. Scientists don’t follow one
linear “scientific method” but rather ask many questions, make predictions, and set up
experiments to help answer those questions. Through analysis of data, scientists draw
conclusions and look for patterns. Those patterns usually lead to new scientific questions. The
ways scientists approach a problem has been identified as an inquiry wheel:
In this lesson, you will learn a strategy for putting together a logical sequence of lessons for your
students. You will go back and review a recent lesson from this course to identify its component
pieces, and you will observe a video showing a similar process.
As you proceed through the lesson, keep the focusing question in mind:
? What are the 5 E’s and how can I use them to make a logical series of lessons to teach a ?
science concept so that my students can learn
MATERIALS
The 5E Learning Cycle (PDF). Excerpt from Teaching High School Science Through Inquiry
The Physics of Optics Video (Annenberg/CPB)
ANALYSIS
• Compare the 5Es with the Essential Features of Inquiry (PDF) and the list How do you
and your students learn best? How can the 5Es support inquiry learning in the
classroom?
• Compare the lessons you saw in the Physics with Optics video with your own teaching.
In what ways might you be able to alter your teaching to be more inquiry-oriented?
CONCLUSION
Use what you learned so far in this workshop to outline a 5E’s learning cycle for a concept you
teach to your students. Be sure to write the concept you are teaching first, then put the lessons in
order.