Science Belief and
Direction Statement
La Center High
School
2003-2004
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LCHS Mission Statement:
The mission of LaCenter High School is to
provide a positive, caring environment founded on high standards
where all students develop skills necessary to be responsible
citizens, active learners, and productive members of a modern global
society.
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LCHS Science Statement:
The study of science involves the investigating,
applying, synthesizing and processing of scientific information.
LCHS' Mission Statement reflects our commitment to helping LaCenter
High School students be accountable for learning science content and
appreciation of standards. Students will understand how our world
works in unison and how we interact with our physical and biological
surroundings. Science not only incorporates basic ideas and theories
but provides a framework for future problem solving.
Students learn best when they:
- are given clear instructions;
- teach each other;
- experience hands-on learning opportunities;
- use visual examples and models;
- see immediate results and get immediate feedback;
- enjoy the results of their work;
- understand and experience the uncertainty of science and
safety
- see and understand the relevance of their learning to their
daily lives and their futures;
- apply vocabulary and concepts to produce products or solve
problems;
- get outside the classroom (field trips / Internet) and explore
the role of science in our daily lives;
- work with data;
- contribute to and experience group trust and cohesion;
and
- utilize technology to solve scientific situations.
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- Quality Indicators:
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- all students are actively engaged in learning;
- there is direct instruction , group work, and individual
accountability;
- students are working together and solving problems;
- students are teaching each other;
- students are involved in science discussion;
- students frequently ask "Why?" and "How does it work?";
- students are using a variety of resources to answer
questions;
- students are learning in a variety of ways;
- students are "doing science";
- the classroom is occasionally a "constructive mess";
- a variety of reference materials are available;
- student produced work is displayed;
- the teacher is not always the center of the classroom;
- the teacher provides guidance but not always answers; and
- discussion of student assessment results are based on clear
scoring guides (rubrics).