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What is FOSS?
FOSS is a research-based science curriculum for grades K8
developed at the Lawrence Hall of Science, University of California
at Berkeley. FOSS is also an ongoing research project dedicated
to improving the learning and teaching of science. The FOSS project
began over 20 years ago during a time of growing concern that our
nation was not providing young students with an adequate science
education. The FOSS program materials are designed to meet the challenge
of providing meaningful science education for all students in diverse
American classrooms and to prepare them for life in the 21st century.
Development of the FOSS program was, and continues to be, guided
by advances in the understanding of how youngsters think and learn.
Science is an active enterprise, made active by our human capacity
to think. Scientific knowledge advances when scientists observe
objects and events, think about how they relate to what is known,
test their ideas in logical ways, and generate explanations that
integrate the new information into the established order. Thus the
scientific enterprise is both what we know (content) and how we
come to know it (process). The best way for students to appreciate
the scientific enterprise, learn important scientific concepts,
and develop the ability to think critically is to actively construct
ideas through their own inquiries, investigations, and analyses.
The FOSS program was created to engage students in these processes
as they explore the natural world.
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