Science is more than a compilation of facts and figures, although one
would not know that from observing classroom lessons in science in
elementary schools in many parts of the world. In fact, there are those
who argue that science is not appropriate subject content for the early
grades of elementary school. There are many schools in which science is
simply not present in the earliest grades. Even where science is taught
in the earliest grades, it is often a caricature of science that is p-
sented to the children. This book offers a vigorous, reasoned argument
against the perspective that s- ence doesn't belong in the early grades.
It goes beyond that in offering a view of s- ence that is both
appropriate to the early grades and faithful to the nature of the
scientific enterprise. Dr. Eshach is not a voice in the chorus that
claims young ch- dren's developmental lack of readiness for such study.
He believes, as do I, that in order to learn science one must do
science. At the heart of the doing of science is the act of exploration
and theory formation. To do science, we must explore the ways in which
the world around us looks, sounds, smells, feels, and behaves.