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Exploring Perspectives on Classroom Dissection: Insights from CASE, PETA, and Beyond

Exploring Perspectives on Classroom Dissection: Insights from CASE, PETA, and Beyond

A few years back the California Science Teachers Association (CSTA then CASE now) and People for the Ethical Treatment of Animals (PETA) found themselves on opposite sides of a dissection debate in Sacramento. PETA was supporting a bill to ban…
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Why Animal-Free Anatomy Lessons are the Future of Education

Why Animal-Free Anatomy Lessons are the Future of Education

Science is always evolving, so why are some of the methods we use to teach it—like dissecting dead animals—stuck in the past? We can better prepare students for the future by leaving behind old ways in favor of innovative and exciting new approaches…
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Evaluating Alternatives to Dissection with the SynFrog

Evaluating Alternatives to Dissection with the SynFrog

At the 2023 California Science Education Conference in Palm Springs, the Keynote Speaker was the inspiring Dr. Tyrone Hayes, who introduced himself as “a boy who loved frogs.” I asked him after the keynote, how he felt about frog dissection, and he…
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Invaluable Learning Experiences: Thoughtful Design and Implementation of Dissections

Invaluable Learning Experiences: Thoughtful Design and Implementation of Dissections

When people recall their science experiences in school, those with strong memories often describe times when they were actively engaging with content, having hands-on exploration, and participating in the process of science. Many describe conducting…
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A Student's Experience with High School Dissection

A Student's Experience with High School Dissection

Like most high school students, I took a course called Human Physiology. I knew it entailed learning about the human body and that I might see images that made me uncomfortable. I was also aware that dissecting an animal carcass was part of the…
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Changing My Thinking About Dissection

Changing My Thinking About Dissection

The article describes a workshop by the Monterey Bay Aquarium, showcasing a more engaging approach to squid dissection. Unlike traditional methods, this workshop involved group discussions and inquiry-based learning, connecting the activity to real…
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Green Engineering Design: Stand-Alone Solar Electric Systems

Green Engineering Design: Stand-Alone Solar Electric Systems

Are you keen to include more lessons on energy in your curriculum but are unsure where to start? Would you like to help your students understand the benefits of solar energy and get them interested in pursuing the plethora of careers offered in the…
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A New Framework for Teaching “Reasoning” in Claim-Evidence-Reasoning

A New Framework for Teaching “Reasoning” in Claim-Evidence-Reasoning

Science requires precise thinking and well-structured writing, which many students struggle with. That’s how we zeroed in on strategies for teaching Claim-Evidence-Reasoning as the subject for a recent educator webinar.
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Science on the Dashboard!

Science on the Dashboard!

Yes, science will be on the California School Dashboard as a placeholder by December 1, 2024. Coming next, science will be included in differentiated assistance in 2025 and part of the Every Student Succeeds Act (ESSA) reporting by 2026.
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Something That a Scientist Does

Something That a Scientist Does

I was a science teacher for thirty-four years. On the first day of school every year, I began every class by asking my students to draw a picture of a scientist doing “something that a scientist does.”
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