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Creating
Dramas in the Classroom
by Paula Kavathas, Ph.D.
The graduate student picked two 7th graders to be
chromosomes. She wrapped toilet paper around their waists
to represent centromeres. She picked two other students
to be centrioles. They tied yarn to their
"chromosome": and then each pulled on the yarn
to separate the two chromosomes. The children laughed
seeing their classmates wrapped in toilet paper being
pulled apart. This little visual drama made an intangible
concept seem real. That is one of the things Ive
learned from working with graduate students in the New
Haven Schools; the value of creating dramas in the
classroom to illustrate scientific principles. For the
past three years Ive been the faculty coordinator
for graduate students who go into 7th grade classrooms in
the New Haven schools to carry out "hands-on,
minds-on" projects.
It all began when several of the graduate students in
the Department of Genetics and I decided that we could
contribute to grade school education by going directly
into the classrooms with equipment, projects, and
enthusiasm. We developed three projects that would fit
into the 7th grade curriculum: 1) phenotype/genotype and
segregation of traits, 2) mitosis and chromosomes, and 3)
DNA. The projects were designed to be carried out in
small groups so that a total of 3-4 teachers were needed
per class. We organized each class period as follows: the
graduate students introduced themselves at the beginning
of the class and in one or two sentences described what
research they were doing. Then one of the students gave a
15 minute presentation to the class as a whole. The
chromosome drama described above was part of one of the
presentations. Then the children were divided into small
groups. Each group either worked with one graduate
student for the whole project or they rotated between
stations with one graduate student taking responsibility
for each station. For instance, in the project on mitosis
and chromosomes, the workstations had i) a video on
mitosis, ii) slides of stages of mitosis in onion cells
observed with a microscope, and iii) karyotypes with 46
or 47 chromosomes. A graduate student at the station with
the karyotypes would have the children count the number
of chromosomes on their karyotype, and then startup a
discussion on how the chromosomes looked and why there
might be 46 or 47.
These demonstrations offered advantages to both the
7th graders and the graduate students. The graduate
students really enjoyed working with the children and
they could experience what it might be like to teach
children. For some, it was their first experience with
low-income urban children and they all met bright
enthusiastic learners. One graduate student told me how
shocked they were at the simple classroom in the science
magnet school. The set of old desks, a few outlets, and a
floor in need of repair was a stark contrast to the 7th
grade science classroom in his school growing up- that
looked more like a lab than a classroom.
These teaching experiences greatly enhanced the
graduate students communication skills. They shared
their individual experiences and learned from each
others presentations. It was challenging to explain
scientific concepts to 7th grade children in a way that
would hold their attention. Yet, with some effort and
creativity, we were able to find some solutions that
opened the minds and hearts of our young students to
science.
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