LCHS: SCIENCE
Teachers in the Science Department at Liberty Common High School are scientific experts. They embrace the school’s classical-orientation model, and foster in their students an appreciation of the truth, beauty, and goodness of the natural world, and the joy of wonder and discovery.
The science curriculum facilitates teaching science-oriented tools and skills such as inquiry, deep observation, problem solving, precision, data manipulation etc. by incorporating them into the teaching of the knowledge-based, content-rich curriculum. This is true of science lessons from kindergarten through graduation, which have been
CLICK HERE to read about teaching the tools of science as described by Mr. John Mays in Wonder to Mastery, a book read together, and embraced by the Science Department.
Science Department: Guiding Philosophy
Students will learn the foundational principles of biology, chemistry, and physics so they can understand and appreciate the beauty, truth, and goodness found in the natural world.
Students and teachers experience the joy and wonder of investigating the natural world.
Students become proficient in using the tools of science.
Student will be prepared for post-secondary success studying biology, chemistry, and physics upon graduation.
In February 2021, Science Department teachers attended the National Symposium for Classical Education, and became inspired to expand the department’s vision for teaching classical science, as well as upgrade pedagogy strategies to augment more historical background in the science curriculum.
Teaching the Nature and Limits of Science
Science attempts to explain the natural world through observation and investigation. As explained by the National Academy of Sciences, science is a particular way of knowing about the world. In science, explanations are limited to those based on observations and experiments that can be substantiated by other scientists. Explanations that cannot be based on empirical evidence are not a part of science.2 For example explanations which rely on supernatural occurrences cannot be meaningfully tested and substantiated by other scientists. Therefore, such explanations are outside the realm of science.
Liberty Common School’s complete Policy on Teaching Science is located in Section 7.3 of the school’s Policy Manual, and also is included in the downloadable content at the bottom of this page.
Teaching Human Reproduction: Section 4.1 of the Policy Manual
Parents own the fundamental responsibility for their children’s education, which includes the teaching of human reproduction. The school’s role should be viewed as a supportive one. We respect the right of parents to engage in conversations with their own children regarding human sexuality separate from the content taught by the school on human reproduction.
Children are naturally modest concerning their bodies and their functions and are not ready to learn everything at once. They are naturally curious, however, and need to get answers to their questions in a way appropriate to their stage of development. In teaching this topic, we want to minimize the embarrassment associated with it for both children and parents. We refer parents to chapters 1 and 3 of Why Johnny Can’t Tell Right from Wrong, by William Kilpatrick, as a supporting reference.
We teach human reproduction in the context of science in the fifth grade and in subsequent life-science courses through twelfth grade. In the elementary grades we adhere to the Core Knowledge Sequence, which includes human reproduction in fifth-grade science. These discussions will occur during regular school hours in gender-separated environments. Parents will be notified in advance and invited to attend class with their child. An alternative activity will be provided for students whose parents choose to excuse their child from the class. The fifth-grade material dealing with human reproduction will be repeated in an evening class. The evening presentations will also be separated by gender, and parents will have the opportunity to preview the material to be covered. Parents may choose to attend any of the evening classes with or without their child.
Therefore, nonacademic topics, such as contraception and relationship models in which students and their peers may engage, are appropriately taught by parents, rather than members of the LCS Science Department.