Introduction to Physical Science/Editing Guide
Introduction To Physical Science Bible
[edit | edit source]Authors
[edit | edit source]Welcome to the IPS project. Before you start writing it would be a good idea to read this guide and get aquainted with the point and audience for this book. This guide is written as a general reference and is, of course, not scripture but it is how the project should genneraly conducted. If you disagree with anything is this guide, I request that you ask the other contributors in the discussion page before changing it to make sure that there is an agreement. Again, welcome to the project and I hope we can all strive to make this a productive experience. --Basejumper123
Purpose
[edit | edit source]- To serve as a one year course in IPS (introductory physical sicence)
- To effectively educate through
- Critical Thinking
- Answering Questions
- Hands-On Work
- Gradual Assesment
- To serve as a complete teacher resource including
- Homework
- Worksheets
- Questions and Problems
- Assesments
- And to fully integrate these resources into the course.
Following the Purpose
[edit | edit source]- Remember to ask before you tell
- Keep students fully involved by forcing them to read in order to answer the chapter questions.
- Order the text so that it logically explains the details of the subject
Audience
[edit | edit source]- This book is targeted at
- 7th-9th graders who have already finished earth and life science
- Generally people ages 13-15
- People who generally need a highly structured learning environment
- The following help
- Concice Points
- Logical Procedure
- Frequent References to previous learning
- Frequent glossaries, word banks, examples
- Resources to gain information on the information (expantion)
- Diagrams
- Real-Life Examples
Formats
[edit | edit source]There are certain formats that should be followed in order to keep this book organized and logical. Keeping sections known will allow the readers of this book (7th-9th graders) to keep on point and will allow the teachers of this course to assign tasks by simply mentioning a section.
Module Formatting
[edit | edit source]- Prose (text regarding the topic)
- Vocabulary
- Questions
- Covering the Reading (questions that check reading comprehension)
- Critical thinking (questions that ask the reader to built answers off what he has learned)
- Exploration (questions that ask the reader to take their learning further (like a small project)
Discussion Formatting
[edit | edit source]- References
- Photo References
- Tasks
- Discussion