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EVIL.jpg The Evil Monkey has a Ph.D. in Neuroscience from a southeastern university. After a postdoctoral nightmare of Inquisitorial proportions, he is currently working in a laboratory and teaching at a local community college. He is still not sure why he wrote this paragraph in the third person, and for that reason is beginning to doubt his sanity. How many freakin' people can fit into his head, anyway? No wait, my head. Oh crap.


Scicurious.jpg Scicurious is a graduate student wrestling with a PhD in Physiology and Pharmacology at a southern institution. She is a nerd, a geek, and also a dork, which takes up a lot of her free time. She sees nothing wrong with talking about herself in the third person, and wonders why Evil Monkey is so freaked out about it.

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« Of Sweet Potatoes, Social Cognition, and Spiritual Hullabaloo | Main | Alliance for Science Public Meeting »

A good science teacher?

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Posted on: June 25, 2006 2:13 AM, by Evil Monkey

If I had to decide what makes a good science teacher, it would be the ability to demonstrate how experiments fit into the proverbial "scheme of things". Nothing kills interest in science faster than 1. not being able to accurately relay the structure of the big picture and 2. just tossing a bunch of apparently random experiments at the students and expecting them to figure out how the pieces fit together. You wouldn't attempt to put a jigsaw puzzle together in the dark, would you?

A second skill that can make a science teacher go from great to outstanding is the ability to motivate students into figuring out the answers themselves; good research skills, the desire to seek answers, and the ability to effectively communicate the results are traits that must be cultivated.

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