Making Curriculum Pop

I just found this really cool science book

Front-Page Science: Engaging Teens in Science Literacy


By: Wendy SaulAngela KohnenAlan Newman, and Laura Pearce
$19.96 - Member Price  
$24.95 - Nonmember Price
 

The U.S. Preventative Services Task Force issued new guidelines for mammograms in 2009. What does this mean for someone with a family history of breast cancer? Congress periodically votes on a piece of legislation called the Farm Bill. What does its current iteration mean for the safety of supermarket eggs? Understanding how the latest science affects real people patients, consumers, voters, and taxpayers is at the heart of science literacy. From Chapter 1 of Front-Page Science Like citizen journalists, your students can get to the heart of science literacy and challenging questions like these with the learn by doing methodology in this innovative book. Front-Page Science uses science journalism techniques to help students become better consumers of, and contributors to, a scientifically literate community. The book is divided into three parts: Background information and a rationale for using science journalism techniques Concrete advice about how to teach science literacy in this framework from helping students find story angles to teaching search strategies and interview techniques The process of putting together and writing a news story, including how to get students started, help them when they re stalled, and respond to their drafts A free website provides downloadable lesson plans, teacher suggestions, and a forum for exchanging ideas with others. Like Front-Page Science, the website is part of the National Science Foundation funded Science Literacy Through Science Journalism project. By making full use of these rich resources, you ll teach your students skills that will help them make sense of their world not just now, but also after graduation and for years to come.
 
 
SO THE QUESTION - is there any similar book for math and news? If there is not one of you must write it!  
 
Any info would be much appreciated.
 
Thanks, 
 
Ryan:)
 

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Replies to This Discussion

FYI: I promoted this website in 2002: http://gargoyle.arcadia.edu/appelbaum/newsproject.htm ...

No responses (yet) despite extensive marketing ...

links there may no longer work ...

Peter

Peter, well first off you really should reboot that work, steal the format from these science dudes and pitch another book - even if you simply edit it.  It has tons of potential.

I'm doing the resource section for a book (these are resources for teaching across the curriculum with newspapers and mags) so the resource has to be up to date for print - I'll go through the links though.  I'm really surprised no one in math is doing the work you started on at a larger scale!

Thanks so much for the response!

Not sure if a book is the best format? Those media dudes might have a good idea (see below).

Wait, did I miss a link - what media dudes? Or are you saying the dudes I found below. (Sorry I have a small brain).

So I found this but at a glance, well, Im not sold at the moment...http://www.media4math.com/MathInTheNews.asp

Hmmm ...

that looks better than I might have thought...

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