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50 Years of ERIC
50 Years of ERIC
The Education Resources Information Center (ERIC) is celebrating its 50th Birthday! First opened on May 15th, 1964 ERIC continues the long tradition of ongoing innovation and enhancement.

Learn more about the history of ERIC here. PDF icon

Showing 1 to 15 of 22 results
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Ridley, Katie – Primary Science, 2014
Katie Ridley, science coordinator at St. Gregory's Catholic Primary School, Liverpool, UK, states that the inspiration for "science ambassadors" came after embarking on the Primary Science Quality Mark programme at their school. Ridley realized that science was just not recognised as such by the children, they talked about…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Catholic Schools, Foreign Countries
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Seeley, Claire; Gallagher, Sarah – Primary Science, 2014
Stories are a place where magical things happen, where ideas are challenged, where the imagination runs free and questions are asked. They are a safe place, where the reader can walk about with new identities, try new ideas, process life's ups and downs and make new meanings. This makes stories the perfect place for creative learning. In this…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Teaching Methods, Reading Materials
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Statham, Mick – Primary Science, 2013
In this second installment of a two-part article, the author draws from coaching and research into children's learning in science to present a model for building pupils' scientific ideas quickly and effectively. In the first article, the author outlined how pupils' reading improves when they are more engaged in finding scientific…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Scientific Concepts, Questioning Techniques
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Davies, Dan – Primary Science, 2013
Helping children to visualise what is inside them and how their bodies work can be a challenge, since teachers are often reliant on secondary sources or investigations that can only measure outward signs (such as pulse rate). Another way is to involve the children in an imaginative role-play exercise where they explore the insides of a…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Science Instruction, Visualization, Human Body
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Metcalfe, Gareth – Primary Science, 2013
Great science teachers recognise the importance of providing children with practical, real-life experiences to develop their understanding of, and enthusiasm for, this truly inspirational subject. However, Gareth Metcalfe believes that the process by which children understand and remember their scientific experiences can be enriched. This article…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Comprehension, Scientific Concepts
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Keeler, Georgie – Primary Science, 2012
To date, the fastest Olympic sprinter is Usain Bolt, who ran 200 m in 19.19 seconds. Would any other animal species on the planet have a chance of beating this man in a race? Children find this kind of question intriguing, and introducing a topic like this is a great way to make biology and mathematics fun. It provides a more practical application…
Descriptors: Biology, Animals, Science Instruction, Elementary School Science
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Marshall, Steve – Primary Science, 2012
In his introduction to the science shows feature in "Primary Science" 115, Ian B. Dunne asks the question "Why have science shows?" He lists a host of very sound reasons, starting with because "science is fun" so why not engage and entertain, inspire, grab attention and encourage them to learn? He goes onto to state that: "Even in today's…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Student Participation, Demonstrations (Educational)
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Ward, Hellen – Primary Science, 2011
Creativity in primary science is even more important now than when it was first raised with the publication of the report "All our futures: creativity, culture and education." Creativity needs to involve both the teacher and the children. Exciting, creative and practical opportunities provided by the teacher will increase children's motivation and…
Descriptors: Classroom Techniques, Creativity, Creative Teaching, Science Instruction
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Croshaw, Charlotte; Willis, Amy – Primary Science, 2011
There are numerous benefits from using puppets in the classroom. There is evidence to suggest that puppets have a positive impact in motivating children and promoting language development. In this article, the authors explore the use of puppets to teach food science and nutrition. (Contains 2 figures.)
Descriptors: Puppetry, Creative Teaching, Learner Engagement, Science Instruction
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Dixon-Watmough, Rebecca – Primary Science, 2011
The Association For Science Education's "schoolscience.co.uk Great Bug Hunt 2011," in association with Martin Rapley and Gatekeeper Educational, has been a resounding success--not only because it fits into the science curriculum so neatly, but also because of the passion it evoked in the children who took part. This year's entries were truly…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Outdoor Education, Entomology, Science Curriculum
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Brazil, Louise; Curtis, Jennifer; Grayer, Rachel; Henry, Ruth – Primary Science, 2011
The school the authors were working in had an established ethos of involving children in their own learning and allowed them to contribute their ideas to the planning of units of learning. Their planning was based on what the class teacher and children had previously begun in their food and nutrition topic. Although the children could not be…
Descriptors: Science Activities, Elementary School Students, Elementary School Science, Science Instruction
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Keogh, Brenda; Naylor, Stuart – Primary Science, 2011
There are lots of exciting ways for children to learn science. Going on a journey is one of them. However, when going to distant places is not possible, a virtual journey may be the next best option. Ricky, one of the authors' puppets, helps children to make virtual journeys, and this can create an exciting context for them to raise questions and…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Teaching Methods
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Brodie, Eleanor – Primary Science, 2010
This article discusses how the author has developed and managed a collection of exciting resources that aim to aid transition from primary to secondary school by tackling science topics through historical contexts. Working with teachers at both primary and secondary level, the Double Crossed project has designed two exciting cross-curricular…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Instruction, History, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Turner, Jane; Bage, Grant – Primary Science Review, 2006
The Primary National Strategy for England argues that teachers need use the QCA units of work (or whichever scheme their school follows) only as a baseline or fallback: drawing on their "own" expertise as storytellers, creative thinkers, problem-solvers and as experts on their own pupils, to design activities that are engaging, motivating and…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Creative Thinking, Elementary School Science, Science Instruction
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Dunne, Ian B. – Primary Science Review, 2006
Science is a story, a narrative, and scientists are storytellers. Teaching is quite possibly the ultimate in storytelling so if one is teaching science he/she is already storytelling. Using a story to set up a science topic is effective. One can engage the brains of the audience, paint the scene, let them realise why the idea or work is important…
Descriptors: Story Telling, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Elementary School Science
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