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4/9/2026

Teaching Science in ABE: Moving Beyond Worksheets to Real Learning



In many Adult Basic Education (ABE) classrooms, science instruction often follows a predictable pattern: vocabulary lists, textbook readings, and worksheets. These approaches are understandable. Teachers are working with limited time, mixed-level learners, and competing priorities. However, when science becomes primarily an exercise in reading comprehension, learners miss the very thing that makes science meaningful: curiosity, investigation, and sense-making.

The purpose of this post is to offer practical shifts that align with best practices in adult science instruction without requiring a total curriculum overhaul.

What We Often See in ABE Science

Traditional ABE science lessons often fall into these traps: Science is taught as reading practice rather than inquiry. A heavy focus on vocabulary before learners understand the concepts. Teacher explanation followed by passive worksheet completion. Limited opportunities for discussion or hands-on exploration. These approaches often emerge when teachers feel pressure to “cover content.” However, evidence  suggests that adults learn science most effectively when they are actively involved in figuring things out rather than just learning about them.

What Best Practice Looks Like in ABE

Strong science instruction doesn't require expensive labs. It centers on these six key principles :

1. Start with Curiosity, Not Definitions
Instead of beginning with a glossary, start with an "Anchoring Phenomenon"—a question, image, or observation that demands an explanation. The Old Way: "Today we will learn about evaporation." The Inquiry Way: Show a wet paper towel drying. Ask: "Where did the water go? Why did it go there?" This shift encourages learners to think like scientists before they are burdened by formal terminology.

2. Use Everyday Phenomena
Adults bring a lifetime of experience to the classroom. Connect science to their roles as parents, workers, and consumers: Why does a soda can "sweat" in the summer? Why do some foods spoil faster than others? Why is the electricity bill higher in the winter even if we don't use the AC?

3. Let Learners "Talk it Out"
Learning deepens when students explain their thinking to one another. You don't need new materials for this—just intentional timing. Use strategies like Turn and Talk or Agree/Disagree lines. Even a five-minute debate on why a car gets hot in the sun can transform a lesson from passive to active.

4. Introduce Vocabulary
"Just-in-Time" Vocabulary is important, but timing is everything. Think of it as "Just-in-Time, not Just-in-Case." Try this: Let learners explore a phenomenon first. Once they have observed water disappearing from a tray, then introduce the word evaporation as a label for what they have already seen. This creates a "mental hook" for the word, making it easier to remember than a dry definition.

5. Incorporate Simple Investigations
Hands-on learning in ABE does not require lab equipment. Simple household materials can create meaningful science experiences — cups, ice, flashlights, or paper towels are often enough. The example comes directly from one of my classroom observations :
​
A teacher placed a cup filled to the top with water and began adding paper clips one at a time. Before starting, he asked learners: "How many paper clips do you think I can add before the water spills over?" Learners immediately leaned in. Some predicted five. Others said twenty. A few debated whether the water would spill at all. As the teacher slowly added paper clips, the tension in the room built. Learners counted aloud and reacted when the water formed a dome above the rim. The teacher asked: Why didn’t it spill right away? What did you notice about the water surface? Have you ever seen something like this before?
This short activity took only a few minutes, but it shifted the lesson from passive listening to active thinking. It also created a natural entry point to introduce concepts like surface tension, prediction, and observation. Simple investigations like this create space for: Prediction Observation Discussion Evidence-based Reasoning Even brief activities using everyday materials can make science more active and meaningful for adult learners.

6. Connect Science to Literacy and Numeracy
Science shouldn't be "one more thing" to squeeze into the schedule; it should be the context for your other lessons. Science naturally requires: Literacy: Evaluating the credibility of a health article. Numeracy: Measuring distances or graphing temperature changes over time. But What About the Test? A common concern for ABE educators is: "If we spend time on experiments, will my students pass the GED? The answer is a resounding yes. Modern high-stakes science tests are not memorization contests; they are logic and data tests. They ask students to interpret graphs, identify variables, and evaluate evidence. Worksheets teach students how to find an answer in a paragraph. Inquiry teaches students how to think like the person who wrote the paragraph. By moving beyond the worksheet, you are building the cognitive stamina and critical thinking required to navigate complex test passages.


A Small Shift Goes a Long Way
Improving science instruction in ABE does not require a complete redesign. By starting with a question, adding discussion, and delaying vocabulary until it's needed, you move science from a chore to a discovery.

Science becomes less about completing worksheets and more about making sense of the world—and that is where meaningful learning begins. The Challenge: What is one "everyday mystery" your students have asked about recently? How could you turn that into a 10-minute inquiry? 
​

Happy Teaching! 

​Lizelena


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