NSF Awards: 1418440
2016 (see original presentation & discussion)
Undergraduate, Graduate, Adult learners
This video show cases our approach to building interdisciplinary capacity to develop continuously improve, and scale tools that support science methods instructors and preservice teachers’ emerging understanding of the new vision for 3-dimensional, disciplinarily-integrated science education while providing unique research opportunities in interdisciplinary science education research for underrepresented minorities.
Elissa Milto
Director of Outreach
Hi,
Love seeing the connection between practice and research! How many teachers have you worked with? Also, can talk a little about the types of tools that you are using?
Rachelle DiStefano
Director, Science Education Research
Hi Elissa,
Thank you for your email! This project builds on the work we did with over 400 middle school teachers in another NSF project that is sunsetting this year. It was clear that tools were needed to help educators understand NGSS and make the necessary shifts in engaging students in the 3-dimensional, interdisciplinary context of investigation of phenomena that exists in the real world. We’ve tested our tools with approximately 100 educators to date and are rolling out a network improvement community (this June) of researchers and practitioners representing multiple campuses across the country who will be using our tools with their preservice and inservice teachers and sharing data to continue to refine the tools and examine their effectiveness in various contexts. The rubrics were developed by “unpacking” each component of each of the three dimensions by grade-level (middle school). We have separate rubrics for each of the science and engineering practices and a “3-D” map or tool that helps users make the connections across teh 3 dimensions. These are web-based, down-loadable tools. Used collaboratively in the context of examining an existing lesson or developing a new one, the tools contain prompts intended to provoke co-reflection and dialogue which leads to deeper understanding of the standards, 3-dimensional learning, and the instructional shifts,
Rachelle DiStefano
Director, Science Education Research
Next Gen ASET (funded by a recent NSF award) builds on findings from our prior $12 million NSF focused on developing district capacity and infrastructures to advance science education. We worked with over 400 middle school teachers across 10 districts in 4 counties in the SF Bay Area. From that experience, we knew that it was critical to develop tools that help educators unpack the 3 components of the 3 dimensions as articulated in the new Framework for K12 science education and revise their current lesson materials. We’ve tested these tools with close to 100 inservice science teachers and county office science coordinators, science methods faculty, and preservice teacher candidates. We are about to expand the testing and continued improvement of these tools at through six additional university partners (with their preservice and inservice teachers) in June. It’s hard to describe in a nutshell the tools we are developing but we have rubrics that unpack each of the science and engineering practices across middle school grade levels and also a tool that helps educators make the connections in their lesson planning or lesson revision across the three dimensions. We are also working on making connections to common core.
Sarah-Kay McDonald
Principal Research Scientist
Fascinating project – thank you for sharing! There’s a lot here I’d love to learn more about—to start, could you provide (or point viewers towards) any additional information on any opportunities there might be for others (researchers, practitioners, students) to use and/or contribute to the development of ASET tools? I’d also be very interested in any evidence that may be emerging on features of the tools instructors and preservice teachers find most valuable. Thanks!
Rachelle DiStefano
Director, Science Education Research
Please fee free to contact me at rachelle.distefano@csueastbay.edu. Our website will be going live at the end of the month. We are launching a network improvement community on June 13/14 of researchers and practitioners representing other universities across the country. They will be using the tools in their science methods classes and, as co-researchers, share data for continuous improvement of the tools. We are completing our annual report in a few weeks that will answer your questions. But, feel free to contact me in the interim.
Rachelle DiStefano
Director, Science Education Research
We are launching in mid June a Network Improvement Community across six universities to continue to study the use of our tools in various contexts — using data on variation to make additional improvements as needed. Are you with a university or PD organization? If you would like more information about learning to use these tools, please feel free to contact me directly.
araina boyd
It is very important to offer continuing support to first generation college students. This project is very crucial to the success of those lacking a strong support network. As a non-traditional, first generation undergraduate student myself, this project is very exciting to hear about. Who can access the ASET tools? I would also like to know how project-based learning might fit into the ‘took kit’.
Rachelle DiStefano
Director, Science Education Research
Please fee free to contact me at rachelle.distefano@csueastbay.edu. Our website will be going live at the end of the month. We are launching a network improvement community on June 13/14 of researchers and practitioners representing other universities across the country who will be using and testing the tools in their science methods classes and, as co-researchers and sharing data with the partnership for continuous improvement of the tools. Given that the new science reform docs are project-based, the tools can be used to inform the development or revision of existing projects to align with the vision of 3-dimensional science learning espoused in the new science reform docs.
araina boyd
Thank You, I look forward to viewing your website! The science reform docs might be very useful for our outreach projects at Iron Range Engineering, which is utilizes project-based curriculum as well. Great project.
Arthur Camins
Director
Rachelle,
I think you have identified some of the key challenges of teaching to the NGSS: Teaching in ways that future teachers and researchers were not taught and translating the ubiquitous references to “critical thinking” into science and engineering practices. Can you say a bit more about how the ASSET tools address the necessary shifts in thinking? Can you share some of the challenges?
Thanks,
Arthur
Rachelle DiStefano
Director, Science Education Research
Thank you for your email, Arthur. The rubrics were developed by “unpacking” each component of each of the three dimensions by grade-level (middle school). Used collaboratively in the context of examining an existing lesson or developing a new one, the tools contain prompts intended to provoke co-reflection and dialogue which leads to deeper understanding of the standards, 3-dimensional learning, and the instructional shifts,
Rebecca Lowenhaupt
I really appreciate your efforts to build collaborative opportunities working across stakeholders. I’m curious about how the conversations are facilitated. Are there particular protocols you use for these collaborations?
Rachelle DiStefano
Director, Science Education Research
In response to some recurring questions here is some background: Next Gen ASET (funded by a recent NSF award) builds on findings from our prior $12 million NSF focused on developing district capacity and infrastructures to advance science education. We worked with over 400 middle school teachers across 10 districts in 4 counties in the SF Bay Area. From that experience, we knew that it was critical to develop tools that help educators unpack the 3 components of the 3 dimensions as articulated in the new Framework for K12 science education and revise their current lesson materials. We secured a second NSF grant to develop and test these tools. We’ve tested them with approximately 100 inservice science teachers and county office science coordinators, science methods faculty, and preservice teacher candidates. We are about to expand the testing and continued improvement of these tools through six additional university partners (with their preservice and inservice teachers) in June. It’s hard to describe in a nutshell the tools we are developing but we have rubrics that unpack each of the science and engineering practices across middle school grade levels and also a tool that helps educators make the connections in their lesson planning or lesson revision across the three dimensions. We are also working on making connections to common core. If you are a university working with single subject pre-service teaching candidates, it may not be too late to join the Network Improvement Community that we are launching this June. It will require a trip to SF for you and a colleague who will be using these tools. The trip to the SF Bay Area is paid by our grant.
Further posting is closed as the event has ended.