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TUSCALOOSA, Ala. - Nationally recognized science educator and cognitive
researcher Dr. Anton Lawson will present the lecture “Promotion
and Evaluation of Reformed Instruction in College Science and Mathematics”
at The University of Alabama on Tuesday, April 29, at 12:30 p.m.
in room 125 ten Hoor Hall on the UA campus.
The event is free and open to the public. Attendees may bring
their lunches.
Lawson will discuss the results of a large-scale curriculum reform
effort underway at Arizona State University, where he serves as
a professor of biology, which has improved teacher effectiveness
and student achievement in the sciences and mathematics.
Entitled the Arizona Collaborative for Excellence in the Preparation
of Teachers, the effort is funded by the National Science Foundation
and has developed a series of measures of active learning, which
can be applied in a wide variety of teaching settings. Lawson will
give evaluative data from five courses that are part of the reform
effort at ASU.
“Results suggest that the teaching reforms lead to substantial
improvements in student achievement. More recent results suggest
that undergraduates that become secondary science and math teachers
teach in a more reformed manner and their students exhibited improved
achievement as a result,” said Lawson.
Lawson’s research focuses on the nature and development
of scientific thinking patterns in students. Major interests involve
determination of factors that influence the development of these
thinking patterns during childhood and adolescence, and determination
of their relationship to each other and to scientific concept acquisition.
The goal is to develop and test theories of the development of thinking
patterns and develop neurological models of cognition.
Lawson received the 1981 award for Outstanding Science Educator
of the Year from the Association for the Education of Teachers in
Science.
He also earned the 1986 award Distinguished Contributions to Science
Education Research from the National Association for Research in
Science Teaching and was honored with the Journal of Research in
Science Teaching Award three times by the National Association for
Research in Science Teaching.
The event is sponsored by the Office of the Dean, in UA’s
College of Arts and Sciences.
The College of Arts and Sciences is the University’s largest
division with more than 35 departments and programs, 6,600 students,
and 350 faculty members.
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