let dr. mayberry re sci wkly 11.8.11
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BALTIMORE COUNTY PUBLIC SCHOOLS
Dr. Joe A. Hairston Superintendent 6901 Charles Street Towson, MD 21204
DIVISION OF CURRICULUM AND INSTRUCTION
Department of STEM Office: (410) 887-4671
John R. Quinn, Executive Director
Office of Science PreK-12 Office: (410) 887-4251
George Newberry, Director Fax: (410) 687-1340
November 8, 2011
Dr. Claude Mayberry
Science Weekly Magazine
2141 Industrial Parkway, Suite 103-A
Silver Spring, MD 20904
Dear Dr. Mayberry,
It was a pleasure talking to you, Mr. Blondell, and Ms. Smith last week about Science Weekly
Magazine. Thank you for including us in the discussion of how Science Weekly can be used to
support STEM. In our discussion, my team and I identified features of Science Weekly that, in
our opinion, contribute to its value as a curriculum supplement and resource to support
development of literacy in science, reading, and writing. I have recapped them for you in the
following list:
Each issue is colorful, eye-catching, and visually appealing. Graphics are professionally
done, and the publisher utilizes cartoons, photographs, maps, graphs, and visual organizers
appropriately for each grade or reading level.
Topics are current, interesting, newsworthy, highly engaging, and are designed to stimulate
and foster students’ natural curiosity about the world around them.
Articles have relevancy and real-world connections.
The information in each issue is well-organized and supports the Maryland State Curriculum
for both science and language arts.
In each issue, scientific experiments are used to help students understand challenging
scientific concepts. Experiments provide hands-on opportunities at all grade levels.
Experiments increase in complexity and sophistication across the grade levels. Student
understanding evolves as related concepts are also incorporated into the lab activities.
Each issue incorporates technology.
Activities and approaches embrace the gamut of learning preferences.
Content is interdisciplinary and clearly demonstrates the interrelationships among science,
mathematics, language arts, social studies, and often the aesthetic arts.
Each issue approaches science through discovery and inquiry.
Concepts are introduced in an age-appropriate, developmental sequence and increase in
complexity, depth, and sophistication at successive reading levels. This feature makes the
publication appropriate for grade levels Kindergarten through Grade 6 and to differentiate at
a particular grade level for students at different reading levels.
Questions and activities provided to students address all levels of Bloom’s taxonomy.
Students at all levels are encouraged to pose scientific questions.
Each issue incorporates vocabulary development strategies to help students learn new words.
These strategies include spelling exercises, puzzles, and opportunities to visualize vocabulary
terms through drawings and manipulatives.
Each issue incorporates story telling for the younger students and expository writing for the
older students. The expository writing component includes short and extended writing,
creative writing, journaling, writing conclusions based on details of evidence gleaned from
laboratories, and Internet or other types of research.
In each issue, students are asked to read for information, to perform a task, and for literary
experience.
In each issue, students are asked to apply knowledge learned to solve a problem or develop a
deeper understanding about a complex concept or situation.
Each issue of the magazine examines a different scientific topic. Over the course of a
publication year, topics integrate all five goals of the state science curriculum.
Science Weekly is the only elementary science periodical provided by subscription to Baltimore
County elementary schools. Our teachers are incorporating it into instruction in K through 5 and
recognize its usefulness as a curriculum supplement and support. And, because Science Weekly
integrates language arts, mathematics, and social studies with science, the magazine provides a
vehicle by which students can incorporate a variety of skills as they explore their curiosity about
the world around them.
We look forward to our continued collaboration as you evolve Science Weekly to keep pace with
school districts’ transition to Common Core Standards and Next Generation Science Standards.
Thank you for your interest in and commitment to the students in Baltimore County.
Sincerely yours,
George A. Newberry
Director, PreK-12 Science
C: Eric Cromwell
Connie Flowers
Andrew Gaylor