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Writing in Science Engaging in Explanation and Argument from Evidence

Writing in Science Engaging in Explanation and Argument from Evidence. Maryland College and Career Readiness Conference Summer 2014. NGSS Practices. Ask questions and define solutions Develop and use models Plan and carry out investigations Analyze and interpret data

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Writing in Science Engaging in Explanation and Argument from Evidence

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  1. Writing in ScienceEngaging in Explanation and Argument from Evidence Maryland College and Career Readiness Conference Summer 2014

  2. NGSS Practices • Ask questions and define solutions • Develop and use models • Plan and carry out investigations • Analyze and interpret data • Use math and computational thinking • Construct explanations and design solutions • Engage in argument from evidence • Obtaining, evaluating, and communicating information

  3. Outcomes • Identify the role of explanation and argument in building science literacy in the classroom. • Identify the progressions of explanation and argument K-12. • Identify the challenges and scaffolding to support student construction of explanations and arguments in the classroom. • Review student work to identify levels of student response in constructing explanations and arguments.

  4. The Role of Explanation and Argument in Science In science, the production of knowledge is dependent on a process of reasoning from evidence that requires a scientist to justify a claim about the world. (explanation) In response, other scientists attempt to identify the claim’s weaknesses and limitations to obtain the best possible explanation. (argument)

  5. Explanation – the Building Blocks of Science

  6. Warm Up • What do you think will be the hardest about incorporating explanation into your instruction? • Finding places in the curriculum where it would make sense to include it. • Developing questions that focus students on using evidence to construct explanations. • Supporting students in classroom discussion. • Supporting students in writing explanations or constructing solutions.

  7. Asking students to demonstrate their own understanding of the implications of a scientific ideas by developing their own explanations of phenomena, whether based on observations they have made or models and designs they have developed, engages them in an essential part of the process by which conceptual change can occur. NGSS Appendix F

  8. What Does Explanation Look Like In the Classroom

  9. Engaging in ExplanationWriting in the Science Classroom Writing Task Explain how change to the biological component of the Everglades ecosystem by the Burmese Python affected the populations of native animals. Use evidence from the text to support your answer.

  10. Turn and Talk at Your Table What components you would expect to see in a student response in the writing task for explanation?

  11. Components of Explanation

  12. The Explanation Framework

  13. Explanations in Science “An explanation includes a claim that relates how a variable(s) relates to another variable or set of variables. A claim is often made in response to a question and in the process of answering the question, scientists often design investigations to generate data.” Explanations rely on evidence and provide the “how” or “why” phenomena occur (reasoning) . NGSS Appendix F

  14. The C – E – R Framework Providing support for building an explanation Evidence Claim Reasoning

  15. Claim – Evidence - Reasoning Framework Claim • A conclusion that answers the question about a phenomena or a solution to a problem. • A statement of what you understand or a conclusion that you have reached from an investigation(s) or text(s) you have read.

  16. Claim – Evidence - Reasoning Framework Evidence Scientific data that supports the student’s claim. • Must be appropriate and sufficient • Can come from an investigation or other source that may include • Observations • Information found in texts • Archived data • Information from an expert

  17. Claim – Evidence - Reasoning Framework Scientific Reasoning • Justification that links the claim and evidence. • Shows why the data counts as evidence to support the claim, using appropriate scientific principles.

  18. Looking at Student Work

  19. Criteria for Evaluating Student Work

  20. Turn and Talk at Your Table • Review the student explanation examples for the Invasive Pythons article and task. • Evaluate examples using the Criteria for the Components of an Explanation.

  21. Explanation and the Standards

  22. NGSS Practice 6 Constructing Explanation and Design Solutions

  23. Turn and Talk • Identify elements of C-E-R Framework in the NGSS Practice of Explanation. • Identify the developmental progression in explanation from the K-1 grade band to 9-12 grade band.

  24. MCC-R Standards for Writing in Literacy for Explanation in Science/Technical Subjects

  25. Common Core Standards Connections with NGSS http://standards.nsta.org/DisplayStandard.aspx?view=topic&id=31

  26. Turn and Talk • Compare the writing standard for explanation in MCC-R Standards for Literacy in Science/Technical Subjects to the Practice of Explanation in NGSS. • What are the implication for explanation in the science classroom when considering MCC_R Standards and NGSS?

  27. Examples of NGSS Performance Expectations • Elementary 4: Use evidence to construct an explanation relating the speed of an object to the energy of that object. • Middle: Construct a scientific explanation based on evidence from rock strata for how the geologic time scale is used to organize Earth’s 4.6 billion-year-old-history. • High:Use mathematical representations to support a claim regarding relationships among the frequency wavelength, and speed of waves traveling in various media. NGSS Core Ideas – Performance Expectations

  28. What are the challenges for students when constructing explanations or designing solutions?

  29. The Challenge ….one challenge across all the science investigations was students’ ability to make sense of data and construct scientific explanations in which they justified their claims. Students were engaged in the investigations, but is was the meaning-making piece after the investigations that was challenging. Supporting Grade 5-8 Students in Constructing Explanations in Science, McNeill and Krajcik

  30. Student Challenges • Using evidence to support their ideas • relies on their own opinions • has difficulty using sufficient evidence • Explaining why the evidence supports their ideas (justification/reasoning) • has difficulty articulating this link and/or using scientific principles • Considering multiple explanations or solutions • has difficulty revising explanations and solutions based on evidence or scientific knowledge.

  31. How do teachers support students in constructing explanations?

  32. Scaffold the Process • Explicitly define the elements of the C-E-R Framework • Provide an organizer • Connect to everyday examples • Provide opportunities for oral discourse of claim, evidence and reasoning before writing • Use teacher questioning or feedback during oral presentation • Model and critique examples • Engage students in peer critique • Provide students with feedback

  33. Scaffold the Process Practices: Construct explanations Writing Task: Explain how change to the biological component of the Everglades ecosystem by the Burmese Python affected populations. Use evidence from the text to support your answer.

  34. Scaffold the Process:Provide an organizer As students use models to analyze and interpret data, organizers can be used to compile information to be used for explanation.

  35. Scaffold the process: Provide opportunities for oral discourse Discuss the predator-prey relationship below with your group.

  36. Importance of Scientific Explanations • Supports understanding of scientific content • Supports 21st Century skills • Requires evidence to support claims • Involves logical reasoning • Models key practices of scientists and engineers • Supports the understanding of the Nature of Science Taking Science to School Supporting Grades 5-8 Students in Constructing Explanation.

  37. Argument in the Science Classroom

  38. Warm Up • What do you think will be the most challenging • about incorporating argumentation into your • instruction? • Students use evidence to support argument. • Students providing alternative explanations. • Students being respectful of other students’ ideas. • Supporting student development of writing arguments.

  39. What is an argument? An argument is the process of defending those explanations by carefully ruling out other alternative explanations and building the case that the data collected is sufficient and appropriate to serve as evidence.

  40. Argument From NGSS In science, the production of knowledge is dependent on a process of reasoning from evidence that requires a scientist to justify a claim about the world. In response, other scientists attempt to identify the claim’s weakness and limitations to obtain the best possible explanation.

  41. What does it mean to engage in argument? • Scientists engage in argument to • defend claims using evidence and reasoning • defend models using evidence • critique the claims of other scientists.

  42. From Explanation to Argument Explanation Make sense of how or why a phenomenon occurred. • Explain why the biodiversity decreased. • Explain the design process used to test a solution for reducing the impacts of human activities on biodiversity. Argument Defend or support knowledge claims through evidence and reasoning • Argue for your explanation for why the biodiversity decreased. • Argue for your experimental design to study the patterns in biodiversity.

  43. What Does Argument Look Like In the Classroom

  44. Argument in the Classroom Student Oral Discourse • Arguments made by others • Written • Videos Student Written Argument

  45. The Argument Framework

  46. Developing the Argument

  47. Looking at Student Work

  48. Turn and Talk at Your Table Evaluate examples of student work using the Argument Framework. • Identify the elements of the argument. • Claims • Evidence • Counterclaims • Rebuttal

  49. Performance Expectations in NGSSArgument Middle School Construct , use, and present arguments to support the claim that when the motion energy of an object changes, energy is transferred to or from the object. (MS-PS3-5) High School Construct an argument based on evidence about the simultaneous coevolution of Earth’s systems and life on Earth (HS-ESS2-7

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