Suggested Strategies and Resources
Use of the following teaching and learning strategies will support literacy development and enhance understanding of Science content: KWL Plus, Inquiry Models, Concept Mapping, flowcharts, Reciprocal Teaching, use
of WebQuests, dialogue journals, publishing annotated resource lists or research on Web sites, writing children's informational texts, electronic collaboration with scientists, investigative groups, debate, forums, Socratic Questioning, fishbowl discussions, Word Walls, hypermedia presentations, and electronic simulations. (Descriptions of many of these
strategies can be found in the links under Key Component B.)
For a general description of how many of the practices listed in
Key Component B might look in the science classroom of the future, see http://horizon.unc.edu/projects/HSJ/Baird.asp.
For more examples of how these strategies can be specifically applied to the secondary science classroom, the following links are worth
exploring:
Resources and strategies for how to use writing in the science classroom can be found at http://www.mdk12.org/instruction/curriculum/hsa/earth_space/writing_classroom.html.
For a good description of how one science teacher uses double entry
journals, see "Using Dialogue Journals in Support of Science Instruction" at http://accessexcellence.org/MTC/96PT/Share/yorks.html.
For a list of WebQuests for high school students in
various content areas, including science, see "Matrix of Examples" at
http://www.webquest.org .
For a summary of best practices in the science classroom, see http://instech.tusd.k12.az.us/balancedlit/handbook/BLHS/blbpscihs.htm.
For a detailed description of a literacy-based end of year collaborative
physics project, see http://ed.fnal.gov/help/97/sightsound/ssscen.html.
For an example of a student rubric to assess scientific inquiry projects, see http://www.nwrel.org/msec/images/science/pdf/secondaryteachers.pdf.
For a set of links and information about inquiry based learning in the high school science classroom, see http://ed.stanford.edu/STEP/resources-science.html.
A literacy infused project example for advanced biology students can be
found at: