IBSE Final

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Chapter 1 The Teaching of Science: Contemporary Challenges


tHE tEACHING OF SCIENCE: 21 st-CENTURY PERSPECTIVES 25


the situation. We value a system with wide and significant variation but appeal


to assessment results as though we were one unified system.


How might this contradiction be resolved? This basic challenge centers on


maintaining the rights of states and local jurisdictions to determine the curric-


ulum, instruction, and assessments and, at the same time, attaining higher


student achievement as a nation. This suggests a place for national common


core standards for science education.


No Child Left Behind


The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 (NCLB) must be considered because it


has been a dominating influence on science education, and its implementation


will continue after the introduction of assessment for science in the 2007–08


school year. The NCLB uses assessment results as a punitive means to ensure


that schools make adequate yearly progress in student achievement. To meet


this goal, the federal law requires states to set high standards, ensure highly


qualified teachers, and implement yearly assessments—all at the state level.


But note that states are still setting the standards and implementing the assess-


ments. Most financial support for changes designed to accommodate the NCLB


mandates goes directly to the states, so NCLB avoids establishing a national


curricula, and I argue that it holds little promise of attaining higher levels of


student achievement—as one nation. Because, by design, NCLB yields decisions


about standards, curriculum, instruction, and assessment to the states, it does


not avoid the fundamental causes of incoherence at the core of the education


system.


A Proposed Solution


I can propose a resolution to the problem. The science framework for the 2009


National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP) and common core stan-


dards hold promise both for maintaining the rights of states and school districts


to select instructional program and for attaining higher levels of achievement—


as a nation.


First, it is important to understand that use of, for example, the NAEP frame-


work and standards such as the National Science Education Standards (NRC 1996)


and common core standards is voluntary.


Second, the framework standards define and describe what students should


know and be able to do. The NAEP framework and national standards include


the science understanding and abilities students should develop as a result of


their K–12 education. They do not prescribe the structure, organization, balance,


or presentation of content and processes in classrooms. To be clear, national stan-


dards and assessment frameworks are not lessons, classes, courses of study, or


school science programs. This said, they do have the capacity to influence core


components of the education system—namely, curriculum, instruction, class-


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