I am happy to learn Science, however, I have faced a few issues. Most of my science lessons have been carried out mostly in powerpoint. Also, my syllabus is too superficial. Why do I say so?
Powerpoint presentations are powerful in bringing concepts across in pointers. They boost the mere lecturing by adding colour and sight to engage another of our senses( the visual) to aid our memory. However, as with all things, for a good, there's a bad. When our teacher uses Powerpoint, concepts may become watered down. This is because long paragraphs are not aesthetically pleasing, and if the teacher does not fully elaborate on the main point, the student does not understand the main concepts. Also, Powerpoints are very logical in their structure, as the teacher advances from slide to slide. Some students do not learn this way. Some need the teacher to explain to him what he does not understand, and/or adjust the difficulty of the explanation to him. A powerpoint is dead, but a teacher is real- the teacher can do a lot of things the powerpoint cannot, so why should the teacher rely on the powerpoint? And since science is about exploring the world through our senses, a classroom sharing like this is quite dead. Why not at least a video?
Secondly, we only learned 7 topics this year. I feel that our current science lessons are too few. Only two and a half hours, math is three hours, is the school placing more emphasis on math? I feel that too little time is given to science. The country is going to need more scientists to make our country ready to face the challenges from global warming and defense technology. And the school says our lower secondary education is to find our interests. If too little time is given to any subject, I'll say there's bias. It's not right. Science must be given at least as much as math, about three hours. Then we can truly learn each subject to find our interests.
Thus I feel these are the two main areas the school needs to look into. I don't think adding more science subjects solves the problem, I think we need to give our students more time. And more exposure to the wonders that science is working out there.
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