HughPickens.com [hughpickens.com] writes:
Heidi Stevens writes in the Chicago Tribune that according to NASA astronaut Mae Jemison
schools treat science like the class where fun goes to die [columbian.com]. “Kids come out of the chute liking science. They ask, ‘How come? Why? What’s this?’ They pick up stuff to examine it. We might not call that science, but it’s discovering the world around us," says Jemison. “Once we get them in school, we turn science from discovery and hands-on to something you’re supposed to do through rote memorization." But science doesn’t have to be that way says Jemison. Especially in the elementary school years. “When you have teachers saying, ‘I don’t have enough time for hands-on activities,’ we need to rethink the way we do education,” says Jemison. “The drills we do, where you’re telling kids to memorize things, don’t actually work. What works is engaging them and letting them do things and discover things.” Jemison has teamed up with Bayer to advance science literacy across the United States by emphasizing the importance of hands-on, inquiry-based learning opportunities in public schools. Bayer announced recently that it will
provide 1 million hands-on science experiences for kids by 2020 [bayer.us]. “Science is around us everywhere," says Jemison. Farming is science. Cooking is science. Even styling hair involves science. “
When we go to the hairdresser, we want her to know something about pH balance [haircrazy.com],” says Jemison with a laugh. “Boy, do we ever want her to know something about pH balance!”
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