What
Didn’t Make it Into the GSS Guides and Why
by
Cary Sneider, Vice President for Programs,
Museum of Science, Boston
NSTA,
March, 2003
Now
that all nine Student Guides and Teacher Guides for the Global
Systems Science course are complete and available online,
it may be instructive to take one last glance at the ideas
that did not make the final cut. For example, the first GSS
prototype was entitled "Planet Under Siege." It
focused primarily on global warming, and emphasized dire consequences
that were predicted if, in fact, the Earth is heating up.
The scientists who reviewed the guide objected strongly to
the title, pointing out that: 1) even if the planet is warming
up, the planet itself is not in danger; 2) at the time—the
early 1990s—the evidence was not yet conclusive that
human activities were having a discernable effect on the climate;
and 3) we needed to take a more balanced approach, letting
our readers see the evidence, and make their own decisions.
We changed the title to the more neutral, "Changing Climate."
When
our first group of 25 teachers came to Berkeley for a three-week
institute on Global Systems Science, they pointed out that
each of the Student Guides was far too long. In order to be
used flexibly, the modules should be much shorter, and each
should have fewer main ideas. We consequently rewrote and
split "Changing Climate" into three guides—"New
World View," about systems thinking, "Changing Climate," about
global warming and the greenhouse effect, and "Life and
Climate," about the history of Earth’s climate
and the evolution of life. Later, we created a concept map
for the series, so that teachers could immediately see how
the key concepts in each of the modules fit together. The
concept map itself changed over time as we wrote, tested,
and revised the entire series.
There
were other changes too, though perhaps not as great as these.
We knew that the concepts of negative and positive feedback
were important, but the terms were somewhat counter-intuitive,
and difficult to grasp in the abstract. Keeping in mind that
these guides are for all students in grades nine to ten, we
didn’t want to alienate students, and teach them that
science is HARD. So, we removed this section from the introductory
guide and wove the ideas into the other guides in the context
of actual global issues that illustrated positive and negative
feedback.
Among
the most difficult changes to incorporate involved the constant
flow of recent scientific findings. The science of global
systems is cutting edge; and there are always new findings
to incorporate. One approach is to "update" the
guides by putting these new findings onto our web page. Another
is to "revise" the guides, by incorporating new
findings into the text. An example is the many recent discoveries
of early human remains in Africa. An article about these changes
by Jeremy deSilva will be published in October, 2003, in The
American Biology Teacher, and overhead transparency masters
illustrating different theories of human evolution will be
placed on the Museum of Science website. We expect to link
these ideas to update the GSS Student Guide "Life and
Climate." Later we can update the guide itself to incorporate
these new ideas. If we are successful, the process of updating
and revision will never stop—so that the Global Systems
Science series itself exemplifies of the nature and process
of science.
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