23 September 2024

Australian Curriculum V9.0 Key Ideas Patterns,order and organisation

 

Australian Curriculum V9.0 Key Ideas Part 1

1. Patterns,order and organisation

What’s important is that the Key ideas and the understanding that sits beneath them are equally relevant to students who want to go on and work in science as it is for those who want to live with an appreciation of science. They are incredibly unifying and equitable.

What they are:

The key ideas distil down scientific knowledge into six guiding principles that we can use to explain a diversity of scientific phenomena.

The key ideas are designed to :

       provide lenses by which we can make sense of the world,

       support teachers and students to make connections across the 3 strands of science,

       support the coherence of science understanding within and across year levels throughout Reception to Year 10.

What they are not:

Whilst big ideas help to frame the ultimate goals of science education, it’s important to recognise that big ideas cannot be taught directly.

If we try to devise activities that teach big ideas directly, we end up with some superficial activity.

We don’t teach students directly about each key idea but provide opportunities for them to learn how there are key ideas underpinning the science concepts found within each strand ->sub strand -> content description

Key Idea: Patterns, order and organisation

       An important aspect of science is recognising patterns in the world around us and ordering and organising phenomena at different scales.

       As students progress from Foundation to Year 10, they build skills and understanding that will help them to observe and describe patterns at different scales and develop and use classifications to organise events and phenomena and make predictions.

       As students progress through the primary years, they become more proficient in identifying and describing the relationships that underpin patterns, including cause and effect.

       Students increasingly recognise that scale plays an important role in the observation of patterns; some patterns may only be evident at certain time and spatial scales.

What do patterns have to do with science?

·         Children naturally develop the skill of pattern recognition but perfecting that skill requires explicit teaching for students to understand how patterns connect mathematics and science.

·         Teachers need to provide opportunities for students to learn how to detect patterns, how to understand patterns, how to analyse patterns, how to use patterns and how to find new patterns.

Why teach science through the Key Idea Patterns?

       Patterns support the development of scientific explanations, theories, and models.

       To support students in understanding core concepts, patterns need to be visible and explicit.

       To engage students in scientists’ science, we need to engage students in using patterns as part of the scientific practices.

       Noting patterns as a starting point for asking scientific questions,

       Using statistics to determine the significance of mathematical patterns

       Mathematical representations are needed to recognise some patterns

       Empirical evidence is needed to identify patterns

       Basing arguments “on inductive generalisations of existing patterns”