Standards
Page Contents:
Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)
And Outdoor Science Education
In NGSS, using science process/scientific thinking is key, vs. memorization of facts
To begin to address NGSS in outdoor education, regardless of the topic, make sure students are engaged in practices, exploring science ideas, and figuring things out during science instruction. “In order to be fully engaged in the practices, it’s simply not enough to merely learn about the science idea, however creative and hands-on the task may be. To engage in the practices, really participate in them, a student has to frame the task as an exploration. The intellectual work [of the classroom] has to be centered on figuring out how or why something happens.“ — Cynthia Passmore, UC Davis School of Education
For more information on how Outdoor Education addresses NGSS and other standards, see http://beetlesproject.org/ngss/
NGSS has 3 Dimensions of learning: Disciplinary Core Ideas (traditional standards - content), Practice Expectations, and Cross-cutting Concepts., hence the cool logo! Another Way to look at these 3 key areas: What Students DO, What students KNOW, and How Students THINK. Teaching students to think like scientists and using the practices of science is 2/3 of science instruction!
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Practices - what students do
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Outdoor Science Education is at the sweet spot right in the center of this Venn diagram of Science, Math, and English Language Arts Practices! THESE are the Science practices we want to develop in our selves and our students. What more "context-rich 'text'" is there than the natural world? My motto is "the best science classroom has no walls" and that is our strength - we are inside the subject matter.
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Disciplinary Core Ideas -what students know
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Ecosystems
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Life Cycles and Traits
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Weather and Climate
Cross-Cutting Concepts - how students think
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Environmental Principles & Concepts
These are now part of our standards!!
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
How one Outdoor program Integrates EP&Cs into curriculum: https://classroomscience.org/articles/fyi/how-one-program-uses-hands-experiences-outdoors-teach-environmental-principles-concepts-epcs
Environmental Literacy
Our programs support these standards and help in creating environmentally literate citizens. The California Department of Education’s Blueprint for Environmental Literacy defines environmental literacy as follows:
“An environmentally literate person has the capacity to act individually and with others to support ecologically sound, economically prosperous, and equitable communities for present and future generations. Through lived experiences and education programs that include classroom-based lessons, experiential education, and outdoor learning, students will become environmentally literate, developing the knowledge, skills, and understanding of environmental principles to analyze environmental issues and make informed decisions.”
We think this is a worthy goal for our students and a benefit to our community and our world.
Social Emotional Learning (SEL)
SEL should be embedded in all of our teaching
![](https://www.google.com/images/icons/product/drive-32.png)
Grow-Outside.org: A Social and Emotional Learning Toolkit for Residential Outdoor Ed
Each year, Residential Environmental Learning Centers (RELCs) collectively touch the lives of roughly two million youth across the United States who spend multiple days with sleeping away from home, sharing meals with classmates, and learning in outdoor settings. In addition to their many other functions, RELCs serve as ideal settings for supporting student growth in social and emotional learning (SEL). This toolkit offers strategies for adopting a more intentional approach to incorporating SEL within RELC program settings, with applications for program improvement across the environmental education field at large.The 5-E Model of Instruction
Compare to the Learning Cycle for Outdoor Education
More Teaching and Learning Methods
Aligning instruction with Next Generation Science Standards (NGSS)
Teaching the way students learn, using the Learning Cycle
Asking the right QUESTIONS to encourage interest, exploration, concept formation, application, and reflection
Facilitating productive DISCUSSION where students can explore their observations and questions, hash out their ideas with peers, and learn to make arguments from evidence
JOURNALING with students for deeper observations, application, and reflection of learning
Using positive MANAGEMENT methods to keep groups engaged