24
See Field Trips, pg 2 Extraordinary Science Field Trips Gary Gittis, science teacher at Downingtown Middle School in Downingtown, Pennsylvania, took 98 seventh graders on a field trip that spanned three states and included whale watching in Plymouth and Cape Cod, Massachusetts. Some NSTA members have taken their students on science field trips with unique purposes, activities, and desti- nations. One teacher, Steven Ruthford, and his 25 Advanced Placement Envi- ronmental Science (APES) students from Bellingham, Washington, sailed aboard a research vessel to the San Juan Islands “to help students review major concepts for the AP exam” and “to have the students investigate local and global environmental topics and issues [outdoors],” he explains. His students “venture[d] into the Puget Sound for various student- and teacher-led lessons,” and hiked “around one small island in the San Juan Islands National Monument,” he relates. Students then taught the entire class brief lessons they had prepared in advance. “For instance, one group led the class through a plankton col- lection process and investigation of marine ecosystems. Another group led the class through a northwest conifer forest hike and investigated stages of succession,” he notes. The students benefited by “having the time to study a topic and prepare a lesson for the class prior to the field trip. The student pairs were seen as the experts for their particular topic, both in their lesson and when we encoun- tered a question associated with their topic,” says Ruthford. Their learning also was enhanced “by having a full day reviewing major concepts associated with their formative assessment,” he contends. “[M]uch of the APES cur- riculum deals with issues of human impact, and this trip provided insight into local issues associated with our class…[such as] the collapse of our CONTENTS 3 Commentary: Ranking Tasks as a Next Generation Physics Assessment 4 Planning and Investing in Safe Science Facilities 6 NSTA Member Poll: Grant Writing Receives Little Support 8 BRAINSTARTER Clue*Doku GRAB BAG Pull-Out Section! G1 Freebies G3 What’s New G4 In Your Pocket 11 NSTA Press, Free Chapter Excerpt: Inquiring Scientists, Inquiring Readers: Using Nonfiction to Promote Science Literacy 13 Blick on Flicks: Dinosaurs! In 3D! 14 Life After Retirement: Voluntary Engagement 16 Ms. Mentor, Advice Column: Test Makeups, Interacting With NSTA Colleagues 19 Mark Your Calendar; Solutions to BRAINSTARTER 20 Painted Frog Hops Off Extinction List PLANNING AND INVESTING IN SAFE SCIENCE FACILITIES PG 4 local fishing industry, the decline of our logging industry, and dynamics of our local watershed.” Heidi McAllister of South Carolina also has led nautical field trips. She and her Hilton Head Island Middle School students have sailed on the Educational Vessel Discovery as part of the Carolina Coastal Discovery marine education program. Her students “do a land and sea activity with a touch tank, dis- section, and more. They learn about recycling oyster shells as well,” she observes. Afterward, students create poems and drawings for a book. Terri Hebert’s field trips also in- volved aquatic learning. She took her 10th graders from north Louisiana “to the Louisiana Universities Marine Con- sortium to work in the Gulf of Mexico for one week,” where they studied “marine biology, water quality, and sampling techniques,” she recalls. They then “returned to north Louisiana and replicated as many of the techniques as possible” at a local lake. Out-of-State Outings “I am writing you from a bus [heading] from Downingtown, Pennsylvania, with 98 seventh-grade students and 75% of my grade-level team from Downingtown Middle School, to the Wolf Conservation Center in South Salem, New York,” wrote Gary Gittis in May. “From there, we will be head- ing to Plymouth, Massachusetts, for an evening whale watch. Tomorrow we go to Cape Cod to Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge and a visit with a few thousand gray seals and another whale watch in Provincetown, Massachusetts. [On] Thursday, we visit the New Bed- ford Whaling Museum and the USS Nautilus submarine in New London, Connecticut, before heading home.” Accompanying them were 28 parents. Gittis said the trip was unusual because “most people think I am in- sane for taking seventh graders on an overnight field trip. I see it as sharing Monthly Newspaper of the National Science Teachers Association Summer 2013 Vol. 25 No. 1 www.nsta.org Grant Writing Receives Little Support Life After Retirement Voluntary Engagement pg 14 Painted Frog Hops Off Extinction List pg 24 NSTA MEMBER POLL pg 6

HARVARD€¦ · Variations on Wondrous Love HYMN No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” Rockingham The congregation standing CALL TO WORSHIP Minister: Your steadfast love,

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Page 1: HARVARD€¦ · Variations on Wondrous Love HYMN No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” Rockingham The congregation standing CALL TO WORSHIP Minister: Your steadfast love,

The Memorial ChurchHARVARD

please silence all electronic devices upon entering the sanctuary of the memorial church.

The Third Sunday in Lent

Sunday, March 23, 2014

Order of Worship-0-

Page 2: HARVARD€¦ · Variations on Wondrous Love HYMN No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” Rockingham The congregation standing CALL TO WORSHIP Minister: Your steadfast love,

Order of Worship

PRELUDE

When Jesus Wept Russell Schulz-Widmar (b. 1944)Variations on Wondrous Love

HYMN

No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” RockinghamThe congregation standing

CALL TO WORSHIP

Minister: Your steadfast love, O Lord, extends to the heavens.

People: Your righteousness is like the mighty mountains.

Minister: How precious is your steadfast love, O God!

People: We feast on the abundance of your house,

Minister: For with you is the fountain of life;

People: In your light we see light.

INVOCATION

CONFESSION

In unison:

Eternal God, in whom we live and move and have our being, whose face is hidden from us by our sin, and whose mercy we forget: Cleanse us from all offenses, and deliver us from proud thoughts and vain desires; that humbly we may draw near to thee, confessing our faults, confiding in thy grace, and finding in thee our refuge and our strength, through Jesus Christ our Lord.

ASSURANCE OF PARDON

THE LORD’S PRAYER

In unison:

Our Father, who art in heaven, hallowed be thy name. Thy Kingdom come. Thy will be done, on earth, as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread. And forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive those who trespass against us. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil. For thine is the kingdom, the power, and the glory, for ever and ever. Amen.

HYMN

No. 35, “God of the Morning, at Whose Voice” ParisThe congregation standing

GREETINGS

Children now join their teachers in the Church School.

THE PEACE

All are invited to join in the singing of Hymn No. 27, verse 1.

Page 3: HARVARD€¦ · Variations on Wondrous Love HYMN No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” Rockingham The congregation standing CALL TO WORSHIP Minister: Your steadfast love,

AT THE OFFERTORY

Sweet Hour of Prayer arr. Dale Wood (1934–2003)

Here an offering is received for the work of the Church within and beyond the University. Ushers will begin the collection from the back of the Church forward.

Praise God, from whom all blessings f low,Praise God, all creatures here below;Praise God above, ye heavenly host;Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.

PSALTER

Psalm 95 Pew Bible, page 513 (OT)To be read responsively; the congregation standing

GLORIA PATRI

See Hymn No. 371

LESSON FROM THE OLD TESTAMENT

Exodus 17:1–7 Pew Bible, pages 59–60 (OT)

ANTHEM

Evening Hymn Elisha West (1752–1808)

The day is past and goneThe evening shades appearOh, may we all remember wellThe night of death draws near.

We’ll lay our garments byUpon our beds to restSo death will soon disrobe us allOf what we here possess.

Lord, keep us safe this nightSecure from all our fearsMay angels guard us while we sleepTill morning light appears.

And when our days are pastAnd we from time removeOh, may we in thy bosom restThy bosom of thy love.

LESSON FROM THE NEW TESTAMENT

Philippians 1:12–26 Pew Bible, pages 173–174 (NT)

Page 4: HARVARD€¦ · Variations on Wondrous Love HYMN No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” Rockingham The congregation standing CALL TO WORSHIP Minister: Your steadfast love,

ANTHEM

Detroit William Bradshaw (1820)

Do not I love Thee, O my Lord?Behold my heart and see,And turn each cursed idol out,That dares to rival thee.

Do not I love Thee from my soul?Then let me nothing love;Dead be my heart to every joyWhen Jesus cannot move.

Thou know’st I love Thee, dearest Lord,But O I long to soarFar from the sphere of mortal joys,And learn to love Thee more.

THE PRAYERS OF THE PEOPLE

Minister: The Lord be with you.

People: And also with you.

Minister: Let us pray. Lord, show us your love and mercy;

People: For we put our trust in you.

Minister: In you, Lord, is our hope;

People: And we shall never hope in vain.

Each time the minister says “Lord, in your mercy,” the congregation will respond with “Hear our prayer.”

THE GRACE

The Grace of Our Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with us all. Amen.

HYMN

No. 155, “My Faith Looks up to Thee” OlivetThe congregation standing

SERMON

Exit or Voice?

HYMN

No. 312, “Come, Thou Fount of Every Blessing” NettletonThe congregation standing

BENEDICTION

POSTLUDE

Toccata Emma Lou Diemer (b. 1927)

Page 5: HARVARD€¦ · Variations on Wondrous Love HYMN No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” Rockingham The congregation standing CALL TO WORSHIP Minister: Your steadfast love,

Announcements Sunday, March 23, 2014

WELCOMEToday is the Third Sunday in Lent. The preacher is the Reverend Dr. Robert Allan Hill, Dean of Marsh Chapel, Chaplain to the University, Professor of New Testament and Pastoral Theology, Boston University. The service is led by the Reverend Dr. Lucy A. Forster-Smith, Sedgwick Chaplain to the University and Senior Minister in the Memorial Church, and Seminarian Jorden Sharick. The first lesson is read by Chisom Okpala, Lowell House ’15. The second lesson is read by Andrew Sudler, Kirkland House ’14.

Listening devices are available to help the hearing impaired participate in the service; please ask an usher for assistance. Following the service, the congregation is invited to a reception in the Memorial Room.

MORNING PRAYERS SPEAKERS: MARCH 24 – MARCH 29, 8:45 a.m.Monday: Lucy Forster-Smith; Tuesday: Lisa Coleman; Wednesday: Matthew Potts; Thursday: Stephen Greenblatt; Friday: Adam Vander Tuig MDiv II; Saturday: Douglas Bond

Following each service of Morning Prayers on Wednesdays, free coffee and snacks will be available at MemCafé from 9:00 to 10:15 a.m. on the steps of the Memorial Church across from Widener Library. All are welcome!

TUESDAY ORGAN RECITAL SERIES: MARCH 25The Tuesday Organ Recital Series continues this week, featuring James Hicks, a specialist in the performance of Scandinavian organ repertoire. The concert, on Tuesday, March 25 at 7:30 p.m. in Memorial Church, is free and open to the public.

THURSDAY LUNCHTIME RECITAL SERIES: MARCH 27The Thursday Lunchtime Organ Recital Series continues its spring term concerts this week on March 27 at 12:15 p.m. These free-admission 30-minute weekly concerts, traditionally held in Adolphus Busch Hall, are instead held this term at University Lutheran Church, 66 Winthrop Street. Please note the new venue.

READING THE BIBLE IN ITS WORLD FOR YOUR WORLDJoin Professor Jonathan L. Walton on Wednesday, March 27, from 7:00–8:30 p.m. in the Pusey Room of the Memorial Church for the fifth session of our year-long Bible study series. Professor Walton will lead a discussion aimed at teaching and facilitating a socio-historical reading of the Bible, using the same exegetical method he employs when preparing his Sunday morning sermons.

C.P.E. BACH ANNIVERSARY CELEBRATIONOn Friday, March 28 at 7:30 p.m., the Harvard University Choir, Harvard Baroque Chamber Orchestra, and Grand Harmonie present C.P.E. Bach’s magnificent oratorio Die Israeliten in der Wüste, in celebration of the composer’s 300th anniversary. The concert will be held in the sanctuary and is free and open to the public.

FAITH & LIFE FORUMThe next Faith & Life Forum will be held on Sunday, March 30 from 9:30–10:30 a.m. in the Pusey Room of the Memorial Church and will feature Martin Copenhaver, President-elect, Andover Newton Theological Seminary. The title of his talk is “‘This Odd and Wondrous Calling.” Join us for coffee and conversation starting at 9:00 a.m.

Page 6: HARVARD€¦ · Variations on Wondrous Love HYMN No. 146, “Jesus, Who This Our Lententide” Rockingham The congregation standing CALL TO WORSHIP Minister: Your steadfast love,

GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP FOR STUDENTS Whether you’ve lost a loved one in the past, or you are in the midst of losing someone now, you are invited to attend a bereavement support group at the Memorial Church. The meetings will take place in the Buttrick Room on Tuesdays, April 1, 8, and 15, from 4:30–5:45 p.m. All students are welcome to share in this safe space of connection, contemplation, and conversation. Space is limited to 10 participants. To register, please contact the Reverend Dr. Lucy Forster-Smith, Sedgwick Chaplain and Senior Minister, at [email protected] or 617-496-3217.

A RECITAL OF CHOIR MUSICThe Chapel Choir of Emmanuel College, Cambridge, UK, will present A Recital of Choir Music, featuring works by J. S. Bach, Pärt, and Whitacre on Saturday, April 5, 8:00 p.m. in the Memorial Church Sanctuary. For more information about the Chapel Choir of Emmanuel College, please visit www.emma.cam.ac.uk/chapel/choir.

WILLIAM BELDEN NOBLE LECTURE: JOSHUA DUBOISJoshua DuBois, former Special Assistant to President Obama and Executive Director of the White House Office of Faith-Based and Neighborhood Partnerships and author of The President’s Devotional, will deliver the 2014 William Belden Noble Lecture on Monday, April 7 at 7:00 p.m. in the Memorial Church Sanctuary. Additionally, on Sunday, April 6 from 9:30–10:15 a.m., please join us for a special Faith & Life Forum in the main sanctuary. Professor David Gergen, Director of the Center for Public Leadership at Harvard’s Kennedy School, will interview Mr. DuBois. Both events are free and open to the public.

CHURCH SCHOOL FOR CHILDRENThe Church School offers Christian education classes for children ages three through twelve. Classes are held in the Buttrick Room during Sunday services, and emphasize biblical themes and scripture. At the conclusion of the worship service, parents are asked to promptly pick their children up in the Buttrick Room. A committed staff of undergraduate teachers work closely with the Church School Coordinator, Brianna Goodlin. Contact Brianna at [email protected] for more information.

MUSIC NOTESThis morning’s music focuses on the early American sacred repertoire, in anthems taken from the famous Sacred Harp collection. Elisha West and William Bradshaw were important members of a group of self-taught composers active in New England during the period 1770–1820. They created an indigenous sacred repertoire readily accessible to all, which became instantly popular amid the explosion of religious fervor at that time; Evening Hymn and Detroit are two haunting examples of minor-key tunes that end on a bare open-fifth chord.

The prelude presents two arrangements by Russell Schulz-Widmar, an important figure in American liturgical music who chaired the music committee for the Episcopal Hymnal 1982; the postlude is a perky Toccata by Emma Lou Diemer, organist of the First Presbyterian Church in Santa Barbara, California.

NEXT SUNDAY’S SERVICENext Sunday is the Fourth Sunday in Lent. The preacher will be Alanna Copenhaver, Ministry Fellow, The Memorial Church.

For more information on upcoming services and events: www.memorialchurch.harvard.edu • www.facebook.com/memorialchurch • twitter.com/memchurch

To subscribe to the Memorial Church e-mail list, visit our website: www.memorialchurch.harvard.edu.