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Under the umbrella of the IAP, more than 140 national, regional and global member academies work together to support the vital role of science in seeking evidence-based solutions to the world’s most challenging problems.

IAP empowers academies and regional academy networks to provide independent, authoritative advice on global, regional and national issues.

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what is science education wikipedia

Science education: purpose, methods, ideas and teaching resources

What is the purpose of science education, what is the best method of teaching science, what is inquiry-based science education, what is an example of inquiry-based learning, free online resources for science teachers, science education ideas.

To prosper in this modern age of innovation requires the capacity to grasp the essentials of diverse problems, to recognise meaningful patterns, to retrieve and apply relevant knowledge.

Science education has the potential for helping the development of the required abilities and understanding by focusing on developing powerful ideas of science and ideas about the nature of scientific activity and its applications .

Scientific literacy refers to an individual’s scientific knowledge and its use . It allows an understanding of the scientific process and makes it possible to apply evidence-based knowledge across a broad range of issues that require individual and collective action (such as responding to COVID-19 and climate change , or understanding AI, machine learning and other new technologies).

Science Education is a key area for the InterAcademy Partnership (IAP) , whose Science Education Programme (SEP) is led by a Global Council of experts that defines and implements its annual activities on global and regional scales.

girls doing science

Science education should enhance learners’ curiosity , wonder and questioning , building on their natural inclination to seek meaning and understanding of the world around. Scientific inquiry should be introduced and encountered by school students as an activity that can be carried out by everyone including themselves.

They should have personal experiences of finding out about and of making connections between new and previous experiences that not only bring excitement and satisfaction but also the realisation that they can add to their knowledge through active inquiry . Both the process and product of scientific activity can evoke a positive emotional response which motivates further learning.

scientific activity for children

Inquiry-Based Science Education (IBSE) adopts an investigative approach to teaching and learning where students are provided with opportunities to investigate a problem, search for possible solutions, make observations, ask questions, test out ideas, and think creatively and use their intuition. In this sense, inquiry-based science involves students doing science where they have opportunities to explore possible solutions, develop explanations for the phenomena under investigation, elaborate on concepts and processes, and evaluate or assess their understandings in the light of available evidence.

This approach to teaching relies on teachers recognizing the importance of presenting problems to students that will challenge their current conceptual understandings so they are forced to reconcile anomalous thinking and construct new understandings.

IAP seeks to reform and develop science education on a global scale, especially in primary and secondary schools, with a pedagogy based on IBSE because it provides opportunities for students to see how well their ideas work in authentic situations rather than in abstract discussions. Students build knowledge through testing ideas, discussing their understanding with teachers and their peers, and through interacting with scientific phenomena.

science class experiment

An example of inquiry-based learning is ' COVID-19! How can I protect myself and others? ' ( free download here ), a new rapid-response guide for youth aged 8–17 developed as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic by the Smithsonian Science Education Center , in collaboration with the World Health Organization (WHO) and IAP .

The guide, which is based on the UN Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) , aims to help young people understand the science and social science of COVID-19 as well as help them take actions to keep themselves, their families and communities safe .

Through a set of seven cohesive student-led tasks , participants engage in the activities to answer questions previously defined by their peers . The questions explore the impact of COVID-19 on the world, how to practice hand and respiratory hygiene and physical distancing, and how to research more information about COVID-19. The final task teaches youth how they can take action on the new scientific knowledge they learn to improve their health and the health of others. Each task is designed to be completed at home.

covid child

Food! Community Research Guide

Food! is a freely available community research guide that uses the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) as a framework to focus on sustainable actions that are defined and implemented by students ( download it here ).

Mosquito! Community Research Guide

This module effectively promotes excellence within science education while fostering pioneering approaches to empower and unite educators around the world. Mosquito! addresses the problem of diseases transmitted by mosquitoes from an educational point of view ( download it here ). 

Other teaching resources and guides

You can download more teaching resources and guides here .

Inquiry-based science education resources

The IAP publication “ Working with Big Ideas of Science Education ” (available for free here ) includes this list of ideas that all students should have had opportunity to learn by the end of compulsory education:

All matter in the Universe is made of very small particles

Atoms are the building blocks of all matter, living and non-living. The behaviour and arrangement of the atoms explains the properties of different materials. In chemical reactions atoms are rearranged to form new substances. Each atom has a nucleus containing neutrons and protons, surrounded by electrons. The opposite electric charges of protons and electrons attract each other, keeping atoms together and accounting for the formation of some compounds.

Objects can affect other objects at a distance

All objects have an effect on other objects without being in contact with them. In some cases the effect travels out from the source to the receiver in the form of radiation (e.g. visible light). In other cases action at a distance is explained in terms of the existence of a field of influence between objects, such as a magnetic, electric or gravitational field. Gravity is a universal force of attraction between all objects however large or small, keeping the planets in orbit round the Sun and causing terrestrial objects to fall towards the centre of the Earth.

Changing the movement of an object requires a net force to be acting on it

A force acting on an object is not seen directly but is detected by its effect on the object’s motion or shape. If an object is not moving the forces acting on it are equal in size and opposite in direction, balancing each other. Since gravity affects all objects on Earth there is always another force opposing gravity when an object is at rest. Unbalanced forces cause change in movement in the direction of the net force. When opposing forces acting on an object are not in the same line they cause the object to turn or twist. This effect is used in some simple machines.

The total amount of energy in the Universe is always the same but can be transferred from one energy store to another during an event

Many processes or events involve changes and require an energy source to make them happen. Energy can be transferred from one body or group of bodies to another in various ways. In these processes some energy becomes less easy to use. Energy cannot be created or destroyed. Once energy has been released by burning a fossil fuel with oxygen, some of it is no longer available in a form that is as convenient to use.

The composition of the Earth and its atmosphere and the processes occurring within them shape the Earth’s surface and its climate

Radiation from the Sun heats the Earth’s surface and causes convection currents in the air and oceans, creating climates. Below the surface heat from the Earth’s interior causes movement in the molten rock. This in turn leads to movement of the plates which form the Earth’s crust, creating volcanoes and earthquakes. The solid surface is constantly changing through the formation and weathering of rock.

Our solar system is a very small part of one of billions of galaxies in the Universe

Our Sun and eight planets and other smaller objects orbiting it comprise the solar system. Day and night and the seasons are explained by the orientation and rotation of the Earth as it moves round the Sun. The solar system is part of a galaxy of stars, gas and dust, one of many billions in the Universe, enormous distances apart. Many stars appear to have planets.

Organisms are organised on a cellular basis and have a finite life span

All organisms are constituted of one or more cells. Multi-cellular organisms have cells that are differentiated according to their function. All the basic functions of life are the result of what happens inside the cells which make up an organism. Growth is the result of multiple cell divisions.

Organisms require a supply of energy and materials for which they often depend on, or compete with, other organisms

Food provides materials and energy for organisms to carry out the basic functions of life and to grow. Green plants and some bacteria are able to use energy from the Sun to generate complex food molecules. Animals obtain energy by breaking down complex food molecules and are ultimately dependent on green plants as their source of energy. In any ecosystem there is competition among species for the energy resources and materials they need to live and reproduce.

Genetic information is passed down from one generation of organisms to another

Genetic information in a cell is held in the chemical DNA. Genes determine the development and structure of organisms. In asexual reproduction all the genes in the offspring come from one parent. In sexual reproduction half of the genes come from each parent.

The diversity of organisms, living and extinct, is the result of evolution

All life today is directly descended from a universal common ancestor that was a simple one-celled organism. Over countless generations changes resulting from natural diversity within a species lead to the selection of those individuals best suited to survive under certain conditions. Species not able to respond sufficiently to changes in their environment become extinct.

Science is about finding the cause or causes of phenomena in the natural world

Science is a search to explain and understand phenomena in the natural world. There is no single scientific method for doing this; the diversity of natural phenomena requires a diversity of methods and instruments to generate and test scientific explanations. Often an explanation is in terms of the factors that have to be present for an event to take place as shown by evidence from observations and experiments. In other cases supporting evidence is based on correlations revealed by patterns in systematic observation.

Scientific explanations, theories and models are those that best fit the evidence available at a particular time

A scientific theory or model representing relationships between variables of a natural phenomenon must fit the observations available at the time and lead to predictions that can be tested. Any theory or model is provisional and subject to revision in the light of new data even though it may have led to predictions in accord with data in the past.

The knowledge produced by science is used in engineering and technologies to create products to serve human ends

The use of scientific ideas in engineering and technologies has made considerable changes in many aspects of human activity. Advances in technologies enable further scientific activity; in turn this increases understanding of the natural world. In some areas of human activity technology is ahead of scientific ideas, but in others scientific ideas precede technology.

Applications of science often have ethical, social, economic and political implications

The use of scientific knowledge in technologies makes many innovations possible. Whether or not particular applications of science are desirable is a matter that cannot be addressed using scientific knowledge alone. Ethical and moral judgments may be needed, based on such considerations as justice or equity, human safety, and impacts on people and the environment.

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what is science education wikipedia

Understanding Science

How science REALLY works...

  • Understanding Science 101
  • Misconceptions

Misconception: Science is a collection of facts.

Correction: Science is both a body of knowledge and the process for building that knowledge. Read more about it.

What is science?

The word “ science ” probably brings to mind many different pictures: a fat textbook, white lab coats and microscopes, an astronomer peering through a telescope, a naturalist in the rainforest, Einstein’s equations scribbled on a chalkboard, the launch of the space shuttle, bubbling beakers …. All of those images reflect some aspect of science. But none of them provides a full picture because science has so many facets:

  • Science is both a body of knowledge and a process. In school, science may sometimes seem like a collection of isolated and static  facts listed in a textbook, but that’s only a small part of the story. Just as importantly, science is also a process of discovery that allows us to link isolated facts into coherent and comprehensive understandings of the natural world .
  • Science is exciting. Science is a way of discovering what’s in the universe and how those things work today, how they worked in the past, and how they are likely to work in the future. Scientists are motivated by the thrill of seeing or figuring out something that no one has before.
  • Science is useful. The knowledge generated by science is powerful and reliable. It can be used to develop new technologies , treat diseases, and deal with many other sorts of problems.
  • Science is ongoing. Science is continually refining and expanding our knowledge of the universe, and as it does, it leads to new questions for future investigation. Science will never be “finished.”
  • Science is a global human endeavor. People all over the world participate in the process of science. And you can too!

This section describes what makes science science. You can investigate:

Science for all

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What Is Science?

  • First Online: 10 November 2022

Cite this chapter

what is science education wikipedia

  • A. R. Prasanna 2  

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From the early days of human history there have been several activities and ideas developed and adopted which indicate the beginnings of science. Particular attention is drawn towards the attempts to analyse natural events going beyond the supernatural and finding cause-effect relationships. Though initially the practices were more to develop weapons for overcoming the competition and protecting against natural disasters, development of intellect led to enquire about how and why of nature and the cosmic order. Initial fear of Nature slowly turned into curiosity pursuance of which gave the beginnings of science as a discipline looking for knowledge for the sake of knowledge as well as for developing technology. Having defined what science is and its purpose, the chapter summarises some landmark technology based on science like unravelling the theories of electro-magnetism, liquid crystals, discovering Vaccination, anti-biotics, X-rays, leading to understanding the DNA structure and their applications in different spheres of life.

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The electric field vectors of a traveling circularly polarized electromagnetic wave. This wave is right-circularly-polarized, since the direction of rotation of the vector is related by the right-hand rule to the direction the wave is moving; credit: Wikipedia contributors. “Circular polarization.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia . Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 11 Jan. 2022. Web. 8 Feb. 22.

Material for this discussion is based on the aspects of liquid crystal from the source https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Liquid crystals.

For details one can see: Wikipedia contributors. “Light-emitting diode.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia . Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 22 Feb. 2022. Web. 4 Mar. 2022.

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Shaver, P. (2018). The rise of science . Springer.

UKSC09. www.sciencecouncil.org/about-science/our-definition-of-science

Wikipedia contributors. “OLED,” Wikipedia . The Free Encyclopedia. Accessed October 19, 2021., from https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=OLED&oldid=1050635815

Wikipedia contributors. (2021). “Liquid crystal.” Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia . Wikipedia, The Free Encyclopedia, 17 Oct. 2021. Web. 3 Dec. 2021.

Winchester, A. M. (2020). Genetics . 2020, https://www.britannica.com/science/ / genetics

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Prasanna, A.R. (2022). What Is Science?. In: How to Learn and Practice Science. Springer, Cham. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-14514-8_1

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NCSE

A new law in West Virginia is intended to allow the teaching of "intelligent design." Help us keep stealth creationism out of science classrooms.

Millions of students don't get an accurate science education, the national center for science education believes they deserve better., the root of the problem, science teachers recognize that evolution and climate change are widely misunderstood or rejected in many places..

Teaching these topics without specific training is challenging. Many teachers avoid these well-established yet culturally controversial areas of science to avoid conflict.

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Mental & Behavioral Health Licensure

Related topics:, on this page..., supervision plan & report forms, laws & rules, apply online.

Create an account, apply, renew, and pay for your license online using our self-service portal.

Learn how to apply for or renew your mental and behavioral health license.

Marital and Family Therapist Permanent License

Marital and family therapist temporary license, mental health counselor permanent license, mental health counselor temporary license, behavior analyst or assistant behavior analyst.

  • Supervision Plan Form
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Forms and reports may be submitted electronically to the board office as follows:

Email: [email protected]

A list of approved behavioral health supervisors is available here .

You can renew your license up to 60 days before your current license expires.

Renewal notifications will be emailed to your email address on file with the board at 60, 50, 40 and 30 days prior to the license expiration date. Renew your license early to avoid a late fee or lapse in licensure. All continuing education requirements must be completed prior to license renewal. 

  • Behavioral Analyst Renewal Application

Continuing Education

Licensees are responsible for meeting all continuing education requirements and should review the rules carefully and frequently. Review the rules for detailed information about continuing education definitions, requirements, standards, criteria and other important specific to this profession.

How to Select and Document Continuing Education

The licensing board does not pre-approve continuing education providers, sponsors or individual programs. It is the licensees’ responsibility to determine if the continuing education programs they attend meet the requirements of their professional licensing board.

A percentage of licensees are randomly audited following each license renewal cycle. If selected, the licensee must submit to the board office an individual certificate of completion issued to the licensee or evidence of successful completion of the course from the course sponsor. These documents must contain the course title, date(s), contact hours, sponsor and licensee's name. In some instances, licensees will be requested to provide to the board additional information, including program content, objectives, presenters, location and schedule. Many times an inclusive brochure meets this requirement.

When selecting continuing education programs, licensees need to make sure they are compliant with administrative rule requirements. Some professions require licensees to meet specific requirements as a condition of renewal.  These may include limits on presentation method (e.g. self-study, ICN, etc.), specific hours on ethics and Iowa law and rules, clinical content, or hours required in a specific practice discipline.

To ensure compliance, each licensee must understand the continuing education administrative rules for their profession prior to choosing and attending a particular program. No matter what a program brochure indicates, it is the responsibility of the licensee to ensure compliance with licensing requirements.

In summary all licensees should:

  • Be familiar with the continuing education requirements of their professional boards.
  • Obtain inclusive written materials about continuing education programs from program sponsors for post-renewal auditing purposes.
  • Maintain certificates of completion that includes the program or course title, date(s), contact hours, sponsor and licensee's name for four years.

Extension or Exemption for Disability or Illness

A licensee who had a physical or mental disability or illness during the license period may apply for an extension or exemption. An exemption provides for an extension of time or exemption from some or all of the continuing education requirements. An applicant shall submit a completed application form approved by the board for an exemption.

  • Application for Continuing Education Extension/Exemption for Disability or Illness

The application requires the signature of a licensed health care professional who can attest to the existence of a disability or illness during the license period.

If the application is from a license who is the primary caregiver for a relative who is ill or disabled and needs care from that primary caregiver, the physician shall verify the licensee's status as the primary caregiver.

A licensee who applies for an exemption shall be notified of the decision regarding the application. A licensee who obtains approval shall retain a copy of the exemption to be presented to the board upon request.

Guidelines for Continuing Education Sponsors

The licensing board does not pre-approve continuing education providers, sponsors or individual programs. It is the licensees’ responsibility to determine if the continuing education programs they attend meet the requirements of their professional licensure board.

Potential sponsors are responsible for independently determining if the programs they provide conform to the continuing education requirements set forth in the rules regulations of the professional boards.

To make this determination, thoroughly review the rules for the board(s) in which you are interested prior to offering continuing education to Iowa licensees. By providing inclusive information about the content, objectives and applicability of your program to professional practice, you will assist licensees to make informed decisions when selecting continuing education.

A percentage of licensees in every profession regulated by a licensing board are randomly selected following each license renewal cycle. For auditing purposes the licensee must submit to the board office an individual certificate of completion issued to the licensee or evidence of successful completion of the course from the course sponsor. These documents must contain the course title, date(s), contact hours, sponsor and licensee's name. In some instances, licensees will be requested to provide to the board additional information to assure compliance with continuing education requirements, including program content, objectives, presenters, location and schedule. For this reason, sponsors should provide these items to licensees in writing. An inclusive brochure may meet this requirement.

Additionally, sponsors should consider profession-specific requirements that licensees must address to assure compliance with continuing education rules when preparing written materials such as method of presentation (home study, ICN, etc.), inclusion of specific hours on ethics and Iowa law and rules, certification status by national associations or boards, clinical content, and hours required in a specific practice discipline.

In summary sponsors should:

  • Be familiar with the continuing education requirements of their professional audiences.
  • Provide inclusive written materials to all program participants.
  • Notify licensees that materials should be retained for four years for auditing purposes.
  • Provide a certificate of completion that includes the program or course title, date(s), contact hours, sponsor and licensee's name.

Definitions, requirements, standards, criteria and other important specific to this profession.

Laws. Laws are contained in the Iowa Code. They are enacted by the Iowa Legislature and provide statutory authority to the professional licensure boards.

  • Chapter 154D -- Behavioral Science Board Law

Administrative Rules. The professional licensure boards adopt rules to interpret and implement the Iowa Code. Administrative rules have the force and effect of law.

  • Chapter 31 -- Licensure of Marital and Family Therapists and Mental Health Counselors
  • Chapter 32 -- Continuing Education for Marital and Family Therapists and Mental Health Counselors
  • Chapter 33 -- Discipline for Marital and Family Therapists and Mental Health Counselors

Iowa Code & Administrative Rules for Licensing Boards

Laws common to licensing boards.

The following laws apply to professional licensure boards.

  • Chapter 17A - Iowa Administrative Procedure Act
  • Chapter 147 - General Provisions, Health-Related Professions
  • Chapter 272C - Continuing Education and Regulation - Professional and Occupational

Iowa Administrative Codes Common to Licensing Boards

The following codes apply to professional licensing boards.

  • Chapter 4 - Board Administrative Processes
  • Chapter 6 - Petitions for Rule Making
  • Chapter 7 - Agency Procedure for Rule Making
  • Chapter 8 - Declaratory Orders
  • Chapter 9 - Complaints and Investigations
  • Chapter 10 - Public records and Fair Information Practices
  • Chapter 11 - Contested Cases
  • Chapter 12 - Informal Settlement
  • Chapter 13 - Discipline
  • Chapter 14 - Use of Criminal Convictions in Eligibility Determinations and Initial Licensing Decisions
  • Chapter 16 - Impaired Practitioner Review Committee
  • Chapter 17 - Materials for Board Review
  • Chapter 18 - Waivers of Variances from Administrative Rules
  • Chapter 19 - Licensure by Verification and of Applicants with Work Experience
  • Chapter 20 - Military Service and Veteran Reciprocity

Rulemaking Notices

  • Administrative Bulletin

Rulemaking notices, along with adopted rule changes, are published in the Iowa Administrative Bulletin. The preamble for each notice includes a summary of the proposed rule changes. The notice includes information about how to submit public comment when applicable. All comments are forwarded to the board for review prior to making a final decision on the outcome of rule change proposals.

Petition for Waiver

The process for seeking a waiver from an administrative rule and the standards under which the petition will be evaluated are described in Chapter 18.

  • Petition for Waiver Form 

Iowa Practitioner Program

The Iowa Practitioner Program (IPP) is available to licensees across multiple licensing boards in Iowa. The Iowa Practitioner Review Committee (IPRC) reviews self-reports made by licensees to determine eligibility for participation. 

IPP was established in 1996 to support licensees who struggle with impairments due to alcohol or drug abuse, mental health conditions, and/or physical disorders. 

The IPRC designs an individualized health contract to meet the needs of the licensee. State law mandates that information in the possession of the IPRC remain confidential. Participation in the program is not a matter of public record.

" Impairment " means an inability to practice with reasonable safety and skill as a result of alcohol or drug abuse, dependency, or addiction, or any mental or physical disorder or disability.

" Self-report " means the licensee providing written or oral notifications to the board that the licensee has received or may receive a diagnosis as having an impairment before the board's receiving a complaint or report alleging an impairment before the date of self-report.

Criteria for Participation in IPP

The IPRC determines whether practitioners are eligible to participate in the program monitored by the committee. A person is ineligible to take part in the program for any of the following reasons:

  • The practitioner engaged in the unlawful diversion or distribution of controlled illegal substances to a third party, or for personal gain or profit;
  • The practitioner is already under a board order;
  • The practitioner has caused harm or injury to a patient;
  • The board is investigating the practitioner that concerns serious matters related to the practitioner's competence;
  • The practitioner failed to provide truthful information or refused to cooperate with the board or the IPRC; or
  • The practitioner has been subject to a civil administrative or criminal sanction for serious infractions of law, professional ethics, or administrative rules related to the practice.

The Health Contract

Based upon the recommendation of an approved evaluator, the IPRC creates an individualized health contract, which provides a detailed description of the goals of the program, requirements for successful completion, and the practitioner's obligations.

Note: The IPRC may refer to the board participants who are not compliant with the terms of their contract for consideration of disciplinary action.

IPRC Composition

The chairperson of the board appoints the members of the IPRC. The IPRC includes, but is not limited to, the following:

  • Executive Director of the board or the director's designee from the board's staff;
  • A practitioner who has remained free of addiction for two or more years after completing a recovery program for drug or alcohol dependency, addiction, or abuse;
  • A physician/counselor with expertise in substance abuse/addiction treatment programs;
  • A psychiatrist or psychologist; and
  • A public member.

Why Use IPP?

The program encourages practitioners who have impairments to get the help they need. All information received by IPP and IPRC remains confidential as long as the practitioner complies with the terms of their agreement or health contract.

By self-reporting to IPP, the practitioner may avoid formal disciplinary action by the licensing Board. Formal disciplinary action taken against a practitioner is a matter of public record. The board reports the action to the press, the National Practitioners Data Bank (NPDB), insurance companies, and to other state and federal authorities. Participation in the program is confidential.

Health care practitioners must report knowledge of another practitioner's possible impairment to the board. Health care practitioners who fail to report colleagues with a possible impairment may be subject to disciplinary action by the board. It is in the practitioner's best interest to self-report an impairment before someone else files complaint or report.

When Should Someone Self-Report to IPP?

If any of the following apply to a practitioner, it is in that person's best interest to self-report to IPP as soon as possible:

  • Charged with, and/or arrested for OWI, or for another alcohol or drug related offense;
  • Disciplined by another federal or state agency for alcohol or drug abuse;
  • Evaluated or treated for a substance use disorder, or is currently enrolled in a recovery program;
  • Diagnosed with a mental health condition and/or a physical health condition;
  • Practiced after drinking alcohol or taking an illegal or mind/mood altering substance;
  • Addiction/dependence on drugs, alcohol or prescription medication; and/or
  • Urged by friend(s), family or colleagues to get help for alcohol or drug abuse, or a mental or physical condtion.

How to Submit a Self-Report to IPP

To self-report, a licensee may:

  • Complete and submit a self-report form online ;
  • Dental Board Licensees/Registrants :  [email protected] ; or
  • Licensees of other Boards : [email protected]
  • Dental Board Licensees/Registrants:   515.725.3491  or 
  • Licensees of other Boards : 515.725.1221 .

IPP Online Forms

IPP Self-Report

Quarterly Report: IPP Participant

About the Board of Behavioral Science

We evaluate the qualifications of applicants for licensure and grants licenses to those who qualify.

Behavioral Science

6200 Park Avenue Suite 100 Des Moines , IA 50321

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  6. A Framework for K-12 Science Education

    what is science education wikipedia

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  1. What is Science

  2. What is Science ?

  3. What is STEAM education and why is it important in our current times?

  4. Basic Science, Do you have minimum awareness in science

  5. simple science experiment #shorts

  6. Most foldable paper #science #sciencefacts

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  1. Science education

    Science education is the teaching and learning of science to school children, college students, or adults within the general public. The field of science education includes work in science content, science process (the scientific method), some social science, and some teaching pedagogy.The standards for science education provide expectations for the development of understanding for students ...

  2. Science education

    Science education is the teaching and learning of science to school children, college students, or adults within the general public. The field of science education includes work in science content, science process, some social science, and some teaching pedagogy. The standards for science education provide expectations for the development of understanding for students through the entire course ...

  3. STEM

    STEM, field and curriculum centred on education in the disciplines of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). The STEM acronym was introduced in 2001 by scientific administrators at the U.S. National Science Foundation (NSF). The organization previously used the acronym SMET when referring to the career fields in those disciplines or a curriculum that integrated knowledge and ...

  4. How has Science Education changed over the last 100 years? An analysis

    1 INTRODUCTION. It would be an understatement to say that the field of science education has dramatically changed over the last 100 years. Through wars and geopolitical events, reforms, epistemological, theoretical, and methodological revolutions, and constant work by an engaged community, science education today looks much different than it did in 1920.

  5. Science education : Background information

    The Encyclopedia of Science Education is aimed at graduate students, researchers, developers in science education and science education research. The topics to be covered encompass all areas of science education and it includes biographical entries on science educators, as well as educators whose work has had an impact on science education as a ...

  6. Science education: purpose, methods, ideas and teaching resources

    Science education has the potential for helping the development of the required abilities and understanding by focusing on developing powerful ideas of science and ideas about the nature of scientific activity and its applications. Scientific literacy refers to an individual's scientific knowledge and its use.

  7. Science Education

    SCIENCE EDUCATION. overview robert e. yager. preparation of teachers robert e. yager. OVERVIEW. Science has become an important component in the K - 12 curriculum in American schools - but less so than reading and mathematics. At the end of the twentieth century reading and mathematics received more attention, government support, and focus for testing.

  8. Science Education in the United States: What the Scientific Community

    Abstract. It is argued that the need to improve science education should be a national priority. Ways are suggested by which the federal government and the scientific community, working together, can address this issue. It is recommended that scientists, engineers, and educators make a significant personal and institutional commitment to ...

  9. Understanding Science 101

    Science is a way of learning about what is in the natural world, how the natural world works, and how the natural world got to be the way it is. It is not simply a collection of facts; rather it is a path to understanding. Science focuses exclusively on the natural world and does not deal with supernatural explanations.

  10. About

    Support Climate Education. Mission Statement: The National Center for Science Education promotes and defends accurate and effective science education because everyone deserves to engage with the evidence.

  11. Science Education

    Science Education Invites Applications for New Co-Editors-in-Chief to Begin on July 1, 2024 and Extend Through December 31, 2027. Science Education is an internationally renowned educational journal that publishes theoretically informed, empirically robust research illuminating significant features of science teaching and learning.Science Education was first published in November 1916 and now ...

  12. What is science?

    Science is a way of discovering what's in the universe and how those things work today, how they worked in the past, and how they are likely to work in the future. Scientists are motivated by the thrill of seeing or figuring out something that no one has before. Science is useful. The knowledge generated by science is powerful and reliable.

  13. What Is Science?

    Stated simply, the purpose of science is to obtain a complete understanding of the fundamental laws that govern the Universe. In its quest for enhanced understanding of nature, one used the existing knowledge to develop new hypotheses and invented new technologies to assist more advanced exploration.

  14. A brief look at the history of science education in America: Its past

    A brief look at the history of science education in America: Its past, present, and future. Orval L. Petersen, Orval L. Petersen. Montclair High School, Montclair, California. Search for more papers by this author. Orval L. Petersen, Orval L. Petersen.

  15. Science

    science, any system of knowledge that is concerned with the physical world and its phenomena and that entails unbiased observations and systematic experimentation. In general, a science involves a pursuit of knowledge covering general truths or the operations of fundamental laws. Science can be divided into different branches based on the ...

  16. Home

    Science teachers recognize that evolution and climate change are widely misunderstood or rejected in many places. Teaching these topics without specific training is challenging. Many teachers avoid these well-established yet culturally controversial areas of science to avoid conflict. 33% of high school biology teachers fail to unequivocally ...

  17. Mental & Behavioral Health Licensure

    The licensing board does not pre-approve continuing education providers, sponsors or individual programs. It is the licensees' responsibility to determine if the continuing education programs they attend meet the requirements of their professional licensing board. A percentage of licensees are randomly audited following each license renewal ...

  18. Scientific method

    The scientific method is an empirical method for acquiring knowledge that has characterized the development of science since at least the 17th century. The scientific method involves careful observation coupled with rigorous scepticism, because cognitive assumptions can distort the interpretation of the observation.Scientific inquiry includes creating a hypothesis through inductive reasoning ...