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1a3 Science Knowledge

Science Knowledge Concepts, Skills, & Connections

1a3 Science Knowledge
1a3 Science Knowledge

Science Knowledge Objectives:

  • Describe how science knowledge is comprised of concepts, skills, and connections with other disciplines.
  • Provide examples of science knowledge related to biodiversity, ecology, and conservation biology.
  • Explain how the course concepts relate to real life, including the final portfolio assignment.
1a3 Science Knowledge

Describe each of the three course topics, including how each can relate to bees.

Explain what a naturalist studies, and how they can differ from a scientist.

Outline a day trip that includes all three aspects of science discovery: exploration, description, and explanation.

Science discovery (exploration, description, and explanation) is the process used to develop science knowledge.  Science knowledge is also often broken into three components: concepts, skills, and connections with other disciplines.
1a3 Science Knowledge

Concepts

What? Where? When? Why? How? Who?  These are some of the questions asked in science.  Conceptual understanding can be small discrete facts supported by evidence or larger accumulations of knowledge that describe (laws) or explain (theories) natural phenomena.
1a3 Science Knowledge

Skills

Doing science means being able to carry out a variety of activities from safety procedures to planning intricate studies.  Critical and creative thinking are used to generate questions, design experiments, and analyze results.  Some biological research is incredibly hands-on requiring field-work and laboratory skills.  Other research requires computer modeling and significant grant writing to acquire funding for equipment and research teams.
1a3 Science Knowledge

Connections

The natural world is complex and often issues transcend a single discipline.  A biologist could work with a chemist or mathematician in designing a study or interpreting data.  If an issue has multiple stakeholders, business representatives, politicians, and government representatives may be informed by research data. 

This course is organized around the basic concepts, skills, and connections that define environmental biology.

Each of the course topics has concepts, skills, and connections that define that area of knowledge.  Here are a few examples.  Once again, you may gravitate towards some aspects of knowledge more than others.
1a3 Science Knowledge

Biodiversity

Concepts: identification, taxonomic classification (Kingdom, Phylum, etc)

Skills: tracking. collecting, identification, field work, could work at genetic level, species, and/or ecosystems

Connections: loss of species biodiversity, monoculture (loss of genetic diversity), decreased habitat and ecosystem diversity

 

Ecology

Concepts: energy relationships, biogeochemical cycles, community interactions, succession, population distribution

Skills: sampling, observation, nets, spatial analysis, experimentation

Connections: explaining and predicting effects, modeling complexity, predicting change

 

1a3 Science Knowledge
1a3 Science Knowledge

Conservation Biology

Concepts: carrying capacity, population size, resource management, can include sustainability and human cultures too, build on biodiversity and ecology knowledge

Skills: interdisciplinary communication, habitat reconstruction

Connections: understanding and working with scientists and professionals from other fields

 

As you might imagine, some tasks draw on multiple forms of knowledge.  For example, you may have a conceptual understanding of bee habitat, the skills to build a structure, and the ability to manage material costs and placement in an optimal location by connecting in information from other fields.

We are going to look ahead to the final project, a portfolio you will be constructing from the media pieces and quiz answers you will be producing at the end of each Guide.  You will be selecting your best work and also hopefully construct something you can use beyond this course.

1a3 Science Knowledge

If at this point you are thinking there are a lot of layers to a biology course, you are right.  Usually these are not stated explicitly, but are embedded in course outcomes.  However, it can be more efficient to be transparent.  Different fields of study have distinct bodies of knowledge, processes for constructing that knowledge, and specific topics that are frequently covered.  

We have one more layer to add, and it may be the most relevant for this course: building a personal perspective of nature and our place in the natural world.

Hundreds of people can take the same course at the same time and come up with different views of, and uses for, the same knowledge.   While watching this video, think about how you view science knowledge, including the aspects you may like the most, or things you may want to learn more about.  There will be a few opportunities to choose different paths to knowledge development in this course.

The next section introduces perspective and explains how all parts of the course come together to change the way you experience the world.
1a3 Science Knowledge

Check your knowledge.  Can you:

  • Describe how science knowledge is comprised of concepts, skills, and connections with other disciplines?
  • Provide examples of science knowledge related to biodiversity, ecology, and conservation biology?
  • Explain how the course concepts relate to real life, including the final portfolio assignment?
Go back to the Course Topics Page
Go forward to the Perspectives Page

Discovery Guide Contents

Complete all four of these sections before taking the quiz and making your media piece.

Back to Module 1

This week’s overview

This Guide

1A: Discovery

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1A: Quiz & Media

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