Category 3 Seminars on Science with the American Museum of Natural History in New York
| Location: | New York, NY, United States |
| Date: | 19 March 2012 — 29 April 2012 |
| Registration Date: | 18 October 2011 — 5 March 2012 |
| Workshops: | Earth: Inside and Out, The Ocean System, Water: Environmental Science, Genetics, Genomics, Genethics, Evolution, The Solar System, The Diversity of Fishes, Earth: Inside and Out, The Ocean System, Water: Environmental Science, Genetics, Genomics, Genethics, Evolution, The Solar System, The Diversity of Fishes, Earth: Inside and Out, The Ocean System, Water: Environmental Science, Genetics, Genomics, Genethics, Evolution, The Solar System and The Diversity of Fishes. |
| Language: | English. |
Registration information
The fee for this workshop is US $535. Click here to download the registration form.
Seminars on Science
These courses are available to IB teachers in all 3 programmes. Now in its twelfth year, the museum’s award-winning Seminars on Science programme has helped over 2,000 teachers complete degree, certification and salary gradation requirements. It has also deepened their scientific understanding by connecting them with museum scientists, rich classroom resources and their peers in a networked community of teachers.
Each six-week online course is designed specifically for teachers, available 24/7 and co-taught by both an experienced classroom teacher and a scientist. The courses are available for up to four graduate credits each.
The course topics allow teachers to reflect on both the subject and its classroom application. The instructional team guides ongoing discussions of the course material that lead to an exciting exchange of questions, ideas and resources. Teachers complete interactive and field assignments including rock or spider collecting or a field trip to the local fish market.
IB teachers will benefit from:
- specialized IB course moderation
- individually customized final culminating assessment project for the Primary Years Programme, Middle Years Programme and Diploma Programme.
For more information on online learning, the teachers, and the time commitment, please click here
Earth: Inside and Out
Feel like you're standing on solid ground? In fact, the Earth and its atmosphere form a dynamic system in a state of constant flux. This seminar shows you the world through geologists' eyes. You'll see how geologists "read the rocks," delve into the geological events that shaped the planet over millions of years, and consider the interconnected systems that cause earthquakes, volcanoes, and major climate changes. A grasp of the scale and nature of geologic change helps you understand how the Earth supports life.
For more information, please click here
To register, please use the following codes:
For Diploma Programme: NYEIO312D
For Middle Years Programme: NYEIO312M
For Primary Years Programme: NYEIO312P
The Ocean System
The physical characteristics of the ocean and its related systems have framed its origin, incredible diversification of life, and amazing ecosystems, like coral reefs and mangrove forests. This seminar explores how oceanographers investigate the role that symbiotic relationships and other biological adaptations have in the dynamics of oceans, a dynamic that is being threatened by human activities and consumption.
For more information, please click here
To register, please use the following codes:
For Diploma Programme: NYOS312D
For Middle Years Programme: NYOS312M
For Primary Years Programme: NYOS312P
Water: Environmental Science
Water — its location, condition, and use — is a critical environmental issue. Central to all ecosystems, water is essential to life as we know it. It shapes our planet on every level, from the chemical properties of the H20 molecule to the central role of water in global climate. This course will focus on why water is such a critical resource, the impact of human consumption on aquatic and terrestrial ecosystems, and the social, economic, and environmental implications of water management.
Along with a solid grasp of these water-related issues, students should come away grounded in the science that underlies all environmental studies. They will be able to: 1) understand the interrelationships between living things and the ecosystems they inhabit; 2) analyze environmental problems caused by changing natural conditions and by human activity; and 3) evaluate ways to resolve and/or prevent these problems.
For more information, please click here
To register, please use the following codes:
For Diploma Programme: NYWA312D
For Middle Years Programme: NYWA312M
For Primary Years Programme: NYWA312P
Genetics, Genomics, Genethics
How will our growing knowledge of the genome affect our health, our societies, and the natural world? How do heredity and the environment interact? This course explores a scientific frontier: how scientists are investigating and applying the information contained in genetic codes. Examine the tools and techniques used in a molecular biology lab, learn about the Human Genome Project, and discuss the ethical issues involved in emerging fields like genetic enhancement, genetically modified foods, and cloning.
For more information, please click here
To register, please use the following codes:
For Diploma Programme: NYGGG312D
For Middle Years Programme: NYGGG312M
For Primary Years Programme: NYGGG312P
Evolution
This course draws on the Museum’s long-standing leadership in the fields of paleontology, geology, systematics, and molecular biology to tell a modern story of evolution. Students will learn why evolution is the fundamental concept that underlies all life sciences and how it contributes to advances in medicine, public health, and conservation. Students will gain a solid understanding of the basic mechanisms of evolution — including the process of speciation — and how these systems have given rise to the great diversity of life in the world today. We’ll also look at how new ideas, discoveries and technologies are modifying prior evolutionary concepts.
For more information, please click here
To register, please use the following codes:
For Diploma Programme: NYEV312D
For Middle Years Programme: NYEV312M
For Primary Years Programme: NYEV312P
The Solar System
The Solar System is our local neighborhood in space, comprising our closest star, the Sun, and the matter that surrounds it. This environment provides rich and diverse source material for a seminar on fundamental astronomical concepts like motion, collisions, and scientific investigation. Using the extensive resources available through the Museum, the Rose Center for Earth and Space and the Museum's partners at NASA, the course will explore a series of questions: How did the Solar System form? What can we tell by looking at the surface of solar system bodies? What is an atmosphere, and how do those of different planets vary? Each week will focus on a different scientific project (such as Venus Express and the Mars rovers) to reinforce the essential concept of science as an ongoing search for better understanding of the universe.
For more information, please click here
To register, please use the following codes:
For Diploma Programme: NYSS312D
For Middle Years Programme: NYSS312M
For Primary Years Programme: NYSS312P
The Diversity of Fishes
Fishes were the first creatures with brains and bony jaws. But their incredible diversity—fishes make up half of all vertebrate species alive today, and live everywhere from mountain streams to ocean depths—makes it easier to determine what's not a fish. This seminar explores this paradox by demonstrating how ichthyologists pursue the evidence through the study of evolution, diversity ecosystems, and biogeography.
For more information, please click here
To register, please use the following codes:
For Diploma Programme: NYDF312D
For Middle Years Programme: NYDF312M
For Primary Years Programme: NYDF312P
Registration information
The fee for this workshop is US $535. Click here to download the registration form.
