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To focus on practicing eliciting and interpreting students’ thinking, this learning cycle details eight activities that support novice teachers as they prepare to engage with students’ ideas during a science lesson.

This three class-session unit, designed for a secondary science methods course, focuses on supporting novice teachers to question the common notion that the sciences are objective, value-free, culture-less, neutral, full of indisputable facts, and immune to human subjectivity.
Select a quadrant below to view related activities:
Introduce
Novice teachers learn about the practice of eliciting and interpreting students’ thinking by examining video of teachers using talk moves during class discussions and learning how to anticipate students’ ideas.
Prepare
Novice teachers learn to identify common thoughts and beliefs that students have about science content and receive feedback on their work of the practice from their peers and teacher educator.
Enact
In their field placements, novice teachers plan and enact a science lesson, paying close attention to how they anticipate students’ ideas and craft talk moves and back pocket questions that support students’ sensemaking.
Analyze
Novice teachers analyze students’ interpretations, reflect on their own experience teaching a science lesson in the field, and analyze a video of their teaching practice.
Tools
Teaching Eliciting and Interpreting in Science
Tools
Teaching Eliciting and Interpreting in Science
Tools
Teaching Eliciting and Interpreting in Science
Tools
Teaching Eliciting and Interpreting in Science

For more information about the learning cycle

Lampert, M., Franke, M. L., Kazemi, E., Ghousseini, H., Turrou, A. C., Beasley, H., Cunard, A., & Crowe, K. (2013). Keeping it complex: Using rehearsals to support novice teacher learning of ambitious teaching. Journal of Teacher Education, 64(3), 226-243.

McDonald, M., Kazemi, E., & Kavanagh, S. S. (2013). Core practices and pedagogies of teacher education: A call for a common language and collective activity. Journal of Teacher Education, 64(5), 378-386.

Teacher Education by Design. (2014). University of Washington College of Education.