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"Informal Education"
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Supporting Inclusion in Informal Education Settings for Children with Neurodevelopmental Disorders: A Scoping Review
by
Azzam, Mohammad
,
Neil, Nicole
,
Ranieri, Julia M.
in
Access
,
Attitudes
,
Behavioral Science and Psychology
2024
Children with neurodevelopmental disabilities are among the most vulnerable to experiencing exclusion from community settings. Informal education settings (IES), such as camps, museums, and zoos, provide rich learning opportunities beyond the classroom, yet inclusion efforts have primarily focused on physical accessibility. A review of research is needed to identify practices that support the participation of children with neurodevelopmental disabilities in these settings. We used a scoping review framework to determine what research exists concerning the participation of individuals with neurodevelopmental disabilities in informal education settings, what practices are used to foster participation in informal education settings for children with neurodevelopmental disabilities and what are the outcomes of these practices on participation. Forty-six studies using quantitative, qualitative, and mixed methods designs were included, with 24 taking place in inclusive settings or programs. The review found that children with neurodevelopmental disabilities continue to experience barriers to inclusion in informal settings, and there are positive outcomes associated with specialized and therapeutic as well as inclusive camps. Moreover, behavioural supports result in increases in social skills and decreases in interfering behaviour in informal settings and caregivers and children with neurodevelopmental disabilities have positive attitudes toward specialized programming. Encouraging and sustaining a variety of options, including inclusive and specialized programs, is likely to support and enhance inclusion. Future studies on inclusive practices in IES should include measures of the degree and quality of participation, including measures of the subjective experiences of participants.
Journal Article
Authentic STEM research, practices of science, and interest development in an informal science education program
2021
BackgroundTwo critical challenges in science education are how to engage students in the practices of science and how to develop and sustain interest. The goal of this study was to examine the extent to which high school youth, the majority of whom are members of racial and ethnic groups historically underrepresented in STEM, learn the skills and practices of science and in turn develop interest in conducting scientific research as part of their career pursuits. To accomplish this goal, we applied Hidi and Renninger’s well-tested theoretical framework for studying interest development in the context of a museum-based, informal science education (ISE) program. We used a mixed methods approach, incorporating both survey and interview data, to address three research questions: (1) As youth engage in authentic science research, do they develop perceived competence in mastering the skills and practices of science? (2) Do participants increase, maintain, or decrease interest in science research as a result of this experience? (3) How does participation in scientific practices manifest in non-program contexts?ResultsOur study yielded three main results. First, we found that participants developed competence in mastering several of the skills and practices of science. Strikingly, there was significant improvement in self-reported level of competency for 15 specific research skills. Second, we found that participants maintained their interest in scientific research over time. Our post-survey results revealed that one hundred percent of students were either excited about or expressed deep interest in scientific research. Based on a Phases of Interest Development Rubric developed for this study, most participants exhibited emerging individual interest. Finally, participants exhibited significant increases in the frequency in which they engaged in scientific practices outside of the program.ConclusionsOur findings suggest that participation in authentic research in an ISE context affords youth critical opportunities for gaining mastery of several of the skills and practices of science, which in turn reinforces, and in some cases increases participants’ interest in scientific research beyond the span of the program.
Journal Article
Disrupting deficit narratives in informal science education: applying community cultural wealth theory to youth learning and engagement
2021
Informal learning organizations such as museums, zoos, aquaria, gardens, and community-based organizations are often positioned as having programming that fill a void that may exist in the lives of youth participants. Often these institutions do not recognize the assets that youth gain from their own homes and communities and bring to bear in these programs and that contribute to their success and persistence in STEM and academics. In this paper, we problematize the prevailing deficit-oriented approach to STEM enrichment programs for youth who are underrepresented in STEM. Drawing from Tara Yosso’s theory of community cultural wealth, we describe the STEM identity and trajectories of three individuals as they navigated a long-term, museum-based, informal science learning program. Using Yosso’s framework, we describe the capital that youth brought into the program and the ways that they leveraged this capital as they moved from middle to high school, and into their postsecondary studies and early careers in the sciences. Furthermore, we describe how their existing capital intertwined with capital they gained from the museum program in ways that fostered persistence and achievement in science.
Journal Article
Navigating Failure in a Museum-Based Videogame: Convergent and Divergent Mechanisms of Collaboration as Potential Levers for Informal Learning About Climate Change
by
Zummo, Lynne
,
Massey, Eliana
,
Menlove, Rebecca T.
in
Analysis
,
Anthropogenic factors
,
Climate
2024
The need for well-designed learning experiences about modern, anthropogenic climate change is great. In light of this need, many scholars have looked towards museums, arguing that as trusted institutions of informal learning, museums are uniquely positioned to support public engagement with contentious, impactful issues like climate change. However, while several museum exhibits have emerged over recent years, empirical research on museum-based learning experiences remains quite limited. We take a step towards advancing understanding of museum-based climate change learning through an empirical investigation at a natural history museum in the US. This study examines learners’ collaborative discourse within one exhibit about climate change, a multiplayer video game called Utah Climate Challenge (UCC). Investigating moments of failure and struggle, we analyze learners’ forms of collaboration through moment-to-moment discourse analysis. Findings demonstrate the importance of scaffolding multiple types of collaboration, as well as the potential for a collaborative, museum-based videogame to support learning of important science concepts relevant to climate change.
Journal Article
Learning from the past; thinking for the future: reflections on STEM and its integration in formal and informal settings
2025
We discuss opportunities to integrate STEM across both formal and informal settings. Our reflections begin with looking back to
Making Science Matter: Collaborations Between Informal Science Education Organizations and Schools
, an influential report published by the Center for Advancement of Informal Science Education (CAISE) in 2010. We expand the arguments in that report to address integrating STEM education in formal and informal education particularly in the light of the growth of interest in teaching about ‘wicked problems’. We discuss several issues that we believe need to be taken into account in developing closer formal/informal collaboration, and trace how they have emerged since the term STEM was first used in the 1960s. We conclude that a significant challenge, that is often overlooked, is that the term STEM has several different meanings and that institutions in formal and informal settings may have different outcomes in mind when collaborating with each other. The implications are that discussing the meaning and purpose of STEM are an essential first step in any collaboration between formal and informal institutions.
Journal Article
Navigating into the future of science museum education: focus on educators’ adaptation during COVID-19
2023
Repeated closures of the world’s science museums to stem the spread of COVID-19 have significantly reduced visitors’ access to informal science learning opportunities. Interviews with educators and an analysis of the online content of a science museum were used in this case study to examine the impact of this phenomenon on informal science education. We present several education examples to highlight how educators have attempted to adapt. Specifically, we describe and characterize educators’ strategies—collaboration, networking, and feedback—to address difficulties involved in developing virtually accessible content that will engage users. In addition, we analyze essential attributes of informal learning in the science museum attributes of interaction, free-choice learning, hands-on experience, and authentic learning that the educators kept in mind while planning and redesigning educational programs and cultural events in response to COVID-19. We conclude by forecasting the future of science museums based on the educators’ perceptions of their roles and the nature of informal science learning, assuming that educators are the crucial agents to build a new future direction.
Journal Article
Design principles for creating digital badges to support learning
by
Tzou, Carrie
,
Tierney, Gavin
,
Horstman, Theresa
in
Academic achievement
,
Aerospace Education
,
College Credits
2020
Purpose
This paper aims to focus on two areas of digital badge design that impact learner experience: the value and meaning of badges outside of their original context and badge function and platform functionality that impact learner experience.
Design/methodology/approach
This research uses a design-based research approach. For this paper, components of badge systems were analyzed to identify the characteristics of learning experiences in each program.
Findings
Findings in this paper are from a National Science Foundation-funded project where digital badge systems were co-designed to connect informal science learning with college credit. The badge design principles presented to address the value of badges and badge function and platform functionality, as well as making program design more systematic and using badge design as a conceptual, organizing design framework for improved educational programs.
Research limitations/implications
Though this research is limited in the number of programs examined, the findings provide a framework for the language and standards to discuss and implement digitals badges.
Practical implications
This paper will be of use to programing developers seeking to integrate badges into their educational programs or simply reexamine their educational goals and opportunities for learners.
Originality/value
This paper challenges the conventional use of badges for simply increasing learner engagement by illustrating that the badge design and development process can improve program design and subsequent learner experience rather than serving purely as a learner motivational tool.
Journal Article
A whale of a time: engaging in a war of values for youth activism in science education
2023
Exposure and experience with ethical dilemmas and controversial socioscientific issues provide a link to students’ lives or a pathway for sympathy/empathy and care, where youth use emotion to engage with the scenario and develop critical thinking skills to respond to ethical issues. For this theoretical paper, I focus on how informal science can be used in science classes to provide such exposure and experience, creating spaces for students to foster erotic relationships with the nature-Other and their local environment. More specifically, this paper aims to discuss how educators can use these informal science experiences, and in this case—those involving marine mammals, to find value for natural phenomena through erotic generosity and phenomenological experiences within the environment and use their knowledge and power to act responsibly.
Journal Article
Facilitation of students’ disembedding in an online visual arts and mathematics education program
2025
Background
Disembedding is a crucial spatial thinking skill in visual arts and mathematics education. It is important in creating and analyzing artworks by separating a figure from its background, as well as for solving geometric problems where shapes must be viewed from new perspectives. Drawing upon research in psychology, arts, and mathematics education, the present study aimed to facilitate students’ disembedding in an online educational program employing the teaching experiment methodology. This program utilized concrete movement artworks, particularly those by Max Bill. Seven sixth-grade students participated remotely in this program, utilizing GeoGebra Classroom.
Main findings
The analysis of video data (talks and drawings) and written notes over three sessions revealed that this online educational program, which was designed for the specific context of visual arts and mathematics, offered students opportunities for the individual and group observation of diverse artworks, the tracing of shape contours, and guided attention to new perceptual organizations of shapes through prompting questions. Overall, this had the potential to facilitate students’ disembedding. This overall process challenged students’ initial simplistic shape organizations based on Gestalt principles, leading to the identification of primary and secondary structures, as well as reversible figures.
Conclusions/potential implications
This research sheds light on the concept of disembedding skills rooted in Gestalt psychology, and its connection to the figure-ground phenomenon observed in both artistic and mathematical contexts. This research offers theoretical and practical contributions. First, it suggests an emerging trajectory of disembedding and proposes methods for nurturing students’ disembedding skills. Second, this study serves as an example for art and mathematics educators in schools and informal learning environments (e.g., art museums) to support students’ spatial thinking. This study contributes to the development of educational programs that facilitate students’ spatial thinking in the context of STEAM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts, and Mathematics) education.
Journal Article
Gender and STEM Education: An Analysis of Interest and Experience Outcomes for Black Girls within a Summer Engineering Program
by
Fletcher, Trina
,
Hooper, Kerrie
,
Alharbi, Ahlam
in
Academic Achievement
,
African Americans
,
Authentic Learning
2024
An effective way to increase the participation of historically excluded students in engineering education is through informal programming that covers science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). This study is part of a broader investigation conducted by Fletcher aimed at evaluating the programs offered by the National Society of Black Engineers (NSBE) as part of the Summer Engineering Experience for Kids (SEEK) program at different sites. The study collected pre- and post-assessment data from 1235 girls across twelve sites to determine if there were significant differences in interest- and experience-related outcomes at single-gender and coeducation sites. The study found that the two single-gender sites out of the twelve sites had statistically significant differences in participant responses in favor of single-gender sites, with one site showing a significant association with overall enjoyment of the program. The study used social cognitive theory (SCT) and intersectionality to guide the research and found that the site type had a significant association with the results. These findings suggest the need for further exploration of the impact of site type within informal education programs, especially those targeting historically excluded populations in STEM.
Journal Article