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Exploratory Learning with a Digital Microscope. Inspire, Explore, and Apply. Copyright © 2004 The George Lucas Educational Foundation. What is special about the digital microscope?. * Engaging and exciting. * A serious tool that is simple to use and fun.
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Exploratory Learning with a Digital Microscope Inspire, Explore, and Apply Copyright © 2004 The George Lucas Educational Foundation
What is special about the digital microscope? • * Engaging and exciting. • * A serious tool that is simple to use and fun. • * Inexpensive and easily purchased.
How is this digital microscope used? Photograph credit: Rebecca L. McNall Invigorating Science Teaching with a High-Tech, Low-Cost Tool By Lynn Bell and Randy Bell
What do they do? * The basic parts of the digital microscope:
What do they do? • * The digital microscope general interface:
What do they do? • * The digital microscope editing interface:
Why use the digital microscope? • Provide hands-on, exploratory learning opportunities. • Encourage interaction, cooperation, and problem solving. • Build workplace skills, motivation, engagement, and self-esteem. National Association for the Education of Young Children (NAEYC). (1996, April). Technology and Young Children—Ages 3 Through 8: A Position Statement of the National Association of Young Children. WestEd. (2002, August). Investing in Technology: The Learning Return. WestEd Policy Program.
Activity 1: • Form groups of two or three. • Read the article Bugscope: Magnifying the Connection Between Students, Science, and Scientists: http://www.glef.org/php/article.php?id=Art_771 • Explore the Bugscope Web site: http://bugscope.beckman.uiuc.edu/ • How might the Bugscope Web site (http://bugscope.beckman.uiuc.edu/) further enhance the use of the digital microscope?
Activity 2: • Form groups of two or three. • Review lesson plan: Insects, Pre-Kindergarten to Grade 2. • Visit the WebQuest: An Insect’s Perspective. • How might the WebQuest be used in conjunction with the example lesson sequence? The “Insects” learning sequence is based on “Brrrr, It’s Alive,” published in ISTE’s National Educational Technology Standards for Students: Connecting Curriculum and Technology (2000).