<DIV><p>After-school and out-of-school programsβas well as home schoolingβhave been growing steadily for nearly a decade, but instructors are still searching for high-interest content that ties into science standards without the rigidity of current classroom canon. The author draws on more than 20 y
Tinkering: Kids Learn by Making Stuff
β Scribed by Curt Gabrielson
- Publisher
- O'Reilly Media
- Year
- 2013
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 269
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
After-school and out-of-school programs - as well as home schooling - have been growing steadily for nearly a decade, but instructors are still searching for high-interest content that ties into science standards without the rigidity of current classroom canon. The author draws on more than 20 years of experience doing hands-on science to facilitate tinkering: learning science while fooling around with real things.
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
After-school and out-of-school programsβas well as home schoolingβhave been growing steadily for nearly a decade, but instructors are still searching for high-interest content that ties into science standards without the rigidity of current classroom canon. The author draws on more than 20 years of
<div><p>After-school and out-of-school programs--as well as home schooling--have been growing steadily for nearly a decade, but instructors are still searching for high-interest content that ties into science standards without the rigidity of current classroom canon. The author draws on more than 20
<p class="description">How can you consistently pull off hands-on tinkering with kids? How do you deal with questions that you can't answer? How do you know if tinkering kids are learning anything or not? Is there a line between fooling around with real stuff and learning? The idea of learning throu