Mr. Bouyer

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Brock Middle School Science Goals

As long as standardized testing remains a major part of State and National Evaluation student curriculum will be somewhat directed. As long as parents and school officials at all levels expect students to be evaluated with grades, the teacher is accountable for the assignment of those grades. However, it is important for students to learn to recognize the quality of their own work.

Testing the ability of students to memorize terms is not one of the BMS Science Goals. The vocabulary tests provided on the website are not part of the normal class grade. They are used as make-up work and for suspended students.

While students are expected to conduct themselves properly in class, there are only:
Four Basic BMS Science Classes Rules:

  1. Treat everyone in the class with respect.
  2. Participate in class.
  3. Use all equipment properly, including computers.
  4. Do not ask to leave the room during class.
      Students may leave the room to take care of a "personal emergency". However, those should not always occur during science class. If this freedom is abused, it will be taken away.
Goal #1 - Develop critical thinking skills.
  • Critical thinking is the disciplined process of actively conceptualizing, analyzing, and applying information gathered from observation or communication as a guide to action. In other words, critical thinking attempts to intellectually figure something out.
  • 35 Strategies to improve critical thinking.
  • The following are the elements of reasoning upon which thinking skills are measured. A defect in any of these areas is a possible source of problems in your reasoning.

    1. What is the purpose or goal?
      • Whenever you reason, you reason to some end.
      • Is your purpose clear?
      • Is your purpose significant or trivial?
      • Is your purpose realistic?

    2. What is the question or problem to be solved?
      • Whenever you attempt to reason something out, there is at least one question or problem at issue.
      • Can you state the question or problem in a clear and relevant way?
      • Do you understand the process required for settling the question or solving the problem?
      • How will you know when the question is answered or the problem solved?

    3. What is your point of view or frame of reference?
      • Whenever you reason, you must reason within some point of view or frame of reference.
      • Is your point of view too narrow or too broad?
      • Is your point of view flexible and fair?
      • Is your point of view based on false or misleading information?

    4. What evidence is your reasoning based on?
      • Whenever you reason, there is some phenomena about which you are reasoning.
      • Is your evidence gathered and reported clearly, fairly, and accurately?
      • Is your data relevant?
      • Is the information adequate for achieving your purpose?

    5. What concepts, theories, or principles is your reasoning based on?
      • All reasoning uses some ideas or concepts.
      • Do you have a complete understanding of the theories involved or is your understanding merely superficial?
      • Are the concepts used in your reasoning clear ones?
      • Are your ideas relevant to the issue at hand?

    6. What assumptions have you made?
      • All reasoning must begin somewhere, must take some things for granted.
      • Are your assumptions clear and justifiable?
      • Are your assumptions crucial or extraneous?
      • Are your assumptions consistent or contradictory?

    7. What are the further implications or consequences of your reasoning?
      • No matter where you stop your reasoning, there will always be further implications and consequences.
      • Have you identified significant and realistic implications of your reasoning?
      • Have you communicated the implications of your views clearly and precisely enough to permit your thinking to be evaluated by the validity of those implications?

    8. What inferences have you made?
      • Reasoning proceeds by steps - "because this is so, that also is so".
      • Are the inferences you draw clear?
      • Are the inferences you draw justifiable?
      • Are the conclusions you draw consistent?

Goal #2 - Build interpersonal and communication skills.

Goal #3 - Gain experience in self-evaluation.

Goal #4 - Increase appreciation for the natural world.

Goal #5 - Form a base for higher level science classes.

Goal #6 - Become a life-long learner.