Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Current Trends in European Astronomy Education
- Project ASTRO: a successful model for astronomer/teacher partnerships
- The Training of Teachers
- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching
- Coping with a New Curriculum: the evolving schools program at the Carter Observatory, New Zealand
- US Science Education Reforms: is astronomy being overlooked?
- “Plaza del Cielo” Complex: its state of evolution
- Astronomy as a School Subject
- Teaching Astronomy at Secondary School Level in Europe
- A High School Course for a wide Range of Student Abilities
- Measuring the Eccentricity of the Terrestrial Orbit: an experiment in the classroom
- A Program incorporating Physics, Astronomy and Environment
- Classroom Activity: Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion
- Collaboration as a Viable Approach for Making Astrophysics Research accessible to the K-12 Community through the Internet and the World Wide Web
- Astronomy Teaching in the Astronautics Club
- The TRUMP Astrophysics Project: Resources for Physics Teaching
- The Life in the Universe Series
- The Astronomy Village: investigating the Universe
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
US Science Education Reforms: is astronomy being overlooked?
from 6 - Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Current Trends in European Astronomy Education
- Project ASTRO: a successful model for astronomer/teacher partnerships
- The Training of Teachers
- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching
- Coping with a New Curriculum: the evolving schools program at the Carter Observatory, New Zealand
- US Science Education Reforms: is astronomy being overlooked?
- “Plaza del Cielo” Complex: its state of evolution
- Astronomy as a School Subject
- Teaching Astronomy at Secondary School Level in Europe
- A High School Course for a wide Range of Student Abilities
- Measuring the Eccentricity of the Terrestrial Orbit: an experiment in the classroom
- A Program incorporating Physics, Astronomy and Environment
- Classroom Activity: Kepler's Laws of Planetary Motion
- Collaboration as a Viable Approach for Making Astrophysics Research accessible to the K-12 Community through the Internet and the World Wide Web
- Astronomy Teaching in the Astronautics Club
- The TRUMP Astrophysics Project: Resources for Physics Teaching
- The Life in the Universe Series
- The Astronomy Village: investigating the Universe
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
Summary
Recent history of science education reform in the USA
In 1981, in response to growing concerns that the United States was falling behind the rest of the world educationally, the federal Secretary of Education created a national commission on excellence in education. This commission was charged with gathering data about the status of U.S. education compared to the rest of the developed world and to define the problems which would have to be faced to successfully pursue the course of excellence in education.
In 1983 this commission issued its report, A Nation at Risk, (Secretary of Education, 1983). The release of this book produced a flurry of activity by schools, political entities and professional groups representing various educational disciplines. These groups included, the National Council of Teachers of Mathematics, the National Governors Association and the National Science Teachers Association and others. By 1989, the American Association for the Advancement of Science (AAAS), a major American organization representing a broad spectrum of the sciences, produced its own call for an improved educational climate for science and engineering. Their book, Science for All Americans, attempted to produce a comprehensive expression of the scientific community as to what constitutes literacy in science, mathematics and technology (Rutherford and Ahlgren, 1990). The release of this report, coming from a credible, broad-based and nationally recognized organization of scientists and engineers produced a great deal of interest in the American press and calls came for developing strategies for action.
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- Information
- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching , pp. 273 - 276Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998