Essential Learning Outcomes
8.0 Inquiry & Analysis: Inquiry: Students systematically explore issues, objects, or works through the collection and analysis of evidence that results in informed conclusions or judgments. Analysis: Students break complex topics or issues into parts to gain a better understanding of them.
8.1. Topic Selection: Fluency is the identification of a creative, focused, and manageable topic that addresses potentially significant yet previously less-explored aspects of the topic.
8.2. Existing Knowledge, Research, and/ or Views: Fluency is the synthesis of in-depth information from relevant sources representing various points of view/ approaches.
8.5. Conclusions: Fluency is stating a conclusion that is a logical extrapolation from the inquiry findings.
8.6. Limitations & Implications: Fluency would demonstrate an insightful detailed discussion using relevant and supported limitations and implications.
11.0. Knowledge of Human Cultures and the Physical and Natural World: Students demonstrate knowledge of human cultures and the physical and natural world.
13.0 Problem Solving: Students will design, evaluate, and implement strategies to answer open-ended questions or achieve a desired goal.
13.1. Define Problem: Fluency demonstrates the ability to construct a clear and insightful problem statement with evidence of all relevant contextual factors.
13.2. Identify Strategies: Fluent students can identify multiple approaches for solving the problem that apply within a specific context.
13.3. Propose Solutions/Hypotheses: Fluent students propose one or more solutions/hypotheses that indicates a deep comprehension of the problem. Solution/hypotheses are sensitive to contextual factors as well as the ethical, logical, and cultural dimensions of the problem.
13.4. Evaluate Potential Solutions: Fluent students demonstrate deep and elegant evaluation of solutions and thoroughly completes all of the following: considers history of problem, reviews logic/reasoning, examines feasibility of solution, and weighs impacts of solutions.
Knowledge Area Outcomes
This course fulfills General Education course requirements for the Physical Sciences Knowledge Area. Therefore, by the end of this course, students will be able to:
(1) Demonstrate understanding of science as a way of knowing about the physical world;
(2) Demonstrate understanding of forces in the physical world;
(3) Discuss the flow of matter and energy through systems (in large and small scales);
(4) Develop evidence-based arguments regarding the effect of human activity on the Earth; and
(5) Describe how the Physical Sciences have been shaped by historical, ethical, and social contexts.