Edited by: Beth Dykstra Van Meeteren
With: Allison Barness, Shelly L. Counsell, Judith M. Finkelstein, Linda May Fitzgerald, Sherri Peterson, Jill Uhlenberg
Publication Date: November 24, 2023
Pages: 160
Series: STEM for Our Youngest Learners Series
Water is a meaningful context for children to engage in inquiry, and to acquire and use science and engineering practices, such as developing spatial thinking and early concepts of water dynamics. This book shows teachers how to provide children with opportunities to engineer water movement through pouring and filling containers of various kinds and shapes, observing how water interacts with surfaces in large and small amounts, exploring how water can be moved, and using water to move objects. These experiences build a foundation that will support children’s more complex study of this phenomena in later schooling, as well as encourage interest in STEM fields. The text offers guidance for arranging the social–emotional, intellectual, and promotional environments of the early childhood classroom; for integrating literacy learning; and for building essential partnerships with administrators and families to enhance STEM learning for our youngest learners.
Book Features:
Beth Dykstra Van Meeteren is director of the Iowa Regents' Center for Early Developmental Education and professor of literacy education at the University of Northern Iowa.
“ The STEM for Our Youngest Learners series is a must-have in any preschool classroom. The books bring together many voices to encourage teachers as they incorporate STEM education into their own classrooms… The books have a very reader-friendly format, and every chapter gives clear, concise direction not only about the activity but how that activity aligns with Next Generation Science Standards.”
—Science and Children
“Dr. Beth Dykstra Van Meeteren has written a comprehensive and practical series for educators, using her own strong research and building on others in the field of early childhood STEM. The series honors the art of teaching and learning and the need for a flexible approach with young learners while still providing enough examples of interactions and explorations to be practically useful as well as theoretically sound. As a museum educator, I especially appreciate the close look at tools and materials used for explorations and even the suggestion, in Investigating Water with Young Children, of creating a water pump museum in the classroom. Early childhood teachers will certainly find a wealth of rich resources in this series.”
—Ann Caspari, early childhood education specialist, Smithsonian National Air and Space Museum
Praise for the STEM for Our Youngest Learners Series
“This series is an important addition to a very limited field of guides for teaching STEM to young learners. While activity books abound, this series, with its basis in constructivism and its use of an inquiry-based teaching model, guides teachers in creating in-depth experiences for children to examine the natural world while building their critical thinking skills and deepening their curiosity about and interest in the world around them.”
—Karen Worth, consultant in science education, early childhood and elementary years
Acknowledgements
1. STEM on Their Own Terms
Beth Dykstra Van Meeteren
Who We Are
Who We Hope You Are
Who We Are Writing About
Inquiry
Engineering
Preparing an Environment for STEM
Summary
2. School Partnerships that Support High Quality STEM
Tuning the Instrument
Teaching as Jazz
Getting the Band Together
Integrative STEM and Literacy
STEM Experiences Executive Functions
Summary
3.Weaving Waterworks Experiences Through the Standards for Meaningful Learning
The Warp and the Weft of Learning and Teaching
Weaving Waterworks Experiences Through the NGSS
Weaving Through the NGSS Science and Engineering Practices
Weaving Through the NGSS Cross Cutting Concepts
Aligning Waterworks Experiences With Preschool Standards
Weaving Through the Early Learning Outcomes Framework
Summary
4. Arranging Space to Investigate Waterworks
Teachers as Engineers
Large Group: A Space to Gather as a Community of Learners
Small Group: A Space for Focused Literacy Learning
A Space for Art and to Document Learning
A Space for STEM
Materials That Contain Water
Materials to Move Water
Materials to Absorb and Repel Water
Coordinating Children’s Movement Among Spaces
Introducing Waterworks Materials
Class Meetings: Nurturing a Community of Learners
STEM as a Context for Writing
Summary
5. Planning and Implementing Experiences in Waterworks in PK–2 Classrooms
Beginning With Teacher Play
Scaffolding Child Inquiry With Productive Questions
Assessment in Waterworks
Preparing For a Paradigm Shift
EXPERIENCE 1. A SET OF SAME-SIZED-SHAPED CONTAINERS
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 2. A SET OF A VARIETY OF CONTAINERS
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 3. A SET OF CONTAINERS WITH HOLES
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
4. A SET OF CONTAINERS WITH DIFFERENT LIDS
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 5: A SET OF MATERIALS TO EXPLORE THE DRAINING OF WATER
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 6: A SET OF TUBES, STOPPERS, AND FUNNELS
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 7: A SET OF PUMPS FOR A MUSEUM
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 8: A SET OF LEAKY CUPS
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 9: A SET OF LEAKY CUPS AND A WATER WALL
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 10: A SET OF WATER PIPES
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 11: A SET OF MATERIALS TO EXPLORE WATER DROPLETS
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
EXPERIENCE 12. A SET OF MATERIALS TO EXPLORE HOW OBJECTS SINK AND FLOAT
Attending to the Four Aspects of the Environment
Summary
Dawn Johnson—Integrative STEM and Literacy in the Preschool Classroom
6. Family and Community Engagement With Waterworks
The Value of Partnering With Families
Listen, Learn, and Build Relationships With Families
Empower Parents With Research and Resources
Prioritize Access and Inclusion
Provide Professional Development for Impactful Family Engagement
Evaluate Impact
Summary
Appendix A: Engineering Habits of Mind in Waterworks
Appendix B: Progress Monitoring of Young Students’ Engineering Habits of Mind
Appendix C: Recording Sheet for Home Scavenger Hunts
References
Index
About the Editor and Contributors
Professors: Request an Exam Copy
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