Inspiring the Next Generation of Innovators: Students, Parents and Educators Speak Up about Science Education - Presentation Transcript
Inspiring the Next Generation of Innovators: Students, Parents and Educators Speak Up about Science Education National Report Release NECC – July 1, 2008 Project Tomorrow & PASCO scientific
Download at: http://www.pasco.com/SpeakUp/ http://www.tomorrow.org/speakup/scienceReport.html Special Speak Up Report In collaboration with PASCO scientific
Key finding: Disconnect between how students want to learn science – and what is really happening in their classrooms
Annual national research project
Online surveys
Open for all K-12 schools
Schools/districts get their own data for planning and budgeting
Collect data ↔ Stimulate conversations
Students, Teachers, Parents and School Leaders
Inform policies & programs
Analysis and reporting – national reports
Services: custom reports, consulting with schools, Speak Up Your Way!
5 years of empowering authentic voices – since 2003:
1.1 million K-12 students
74,000 teachers
34,000 parents
3,200 school leaders
14,000 schools – from all 50 states, DC, American military base schools, Canada, Mexico, Australia
What is Speak Up? 1.2 million respondents
Speak Up is facilitated annually by
Project Tomorrow
(formerly known as NetDay)
About Project Tomorrow:
A national education nonprofit organization providing leadership, research and programming to support STEM education in America’s schools
Learning & Teaching with Technology
Web 2.0 / Web 3.0 in Education
21st Century Skills
Science Instruction & Global Competitiveness
Emerging Technologies in the Classroom
Designing the 21st Century School
2007 survey question themes:
We would like to recognize our Speak Up 2007 Sponsors:
We would like to also acknowledge the support of our Speak Up 2007 National Champion Outreach Partners:
K-12 Students 319,223
Teachers 25,544
Teach science 10,288
Parents (in English & Spanish) 19,726
School/District Administrators 3,263
Schools 3,729
Districts 867
States All 50
Top 10 in total participation:
TX, CA, AZ, IL, AL, MD, NC, PA, FL, MI
About Speak Up 2007 Schools:
97% public, 3% private
32% urban, 40% suburban, 29% rural
43% Title 1 eligible
29% majority-minority student population
Speak Up 2007 Participation Overview
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
Students & technology
National policy
Science instruction
STEM careers
Speak Up 2007 Data Findings
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Do you agree? Improving K-12 science education be a national priority School Leaders: 84% agree
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Science instruction today Teachers: What instructional strategies do you use to teach science? What are the barriers to teaching inquiry-based science?
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
Which of these instructional strategies is the primary method teachers are using?
Inquiry based investigations 25%
Lecture 23%
Kit-based materials 21%
Hands-on activities 30%
Make science relevant in today’s world 26%
Demonstration lessons 26%
Multimedia/interactive simulations 16%
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
What the barriers to teaching inquiry-based science?
Lack of time to conduct investigations
Inadequate equipment or materials
Lack of funding to purchase materials
Pressure to conform to a prescribed curriculum
Inadequate space
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Improving science instruction Parents: What would improve your child’s science education? Students: Imagine your ultimate science classroom
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Parents: What would improve your child’s science education? Top voter getters:
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
Parents: What would improve your child’s science education?
Top voter getters:
Teacher excited about science 60%
Child conducting real research 52%
Teacher well trained in science 44%
Using tech tools for investigations 43%
Explain relevancy to my child 40%
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
Parents: What would improve your child’s science education?
Top voter getters:
Teacher excited about science 60%
Child conducting real research 52%
Teacher well trained in science 44%
Using tech tools for investigations 43%
Explain relevancy to my child 40%
Bottom vote getter: Reading the science textbook 11%
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
Students: Design the ultimate science classroom
What do the students want?
Teacher excited about science
Use animations & simulations
Conduct real research
Work on group projects
Use tech tools for investigations
Use standard lab tools
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Students: Design the ultimate science classroom
21 st Century Science Education & Technology 21 st Century Tools Teachers: Which tools have the greatest potential for increasing student achievement? Administrators: What factors influence you and your decisions for improving science education?
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Teachers: Which tools have the greatest potential for increasing student achievement?
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Teachers: Which tools have the greatest potential for increasing student achievement? 21 st century tool Advanced-level Average-level Beginner-level Animations 51% 43% 38% Simulations 50% 40% 32% Standard tools 42% 36% 27% Projection systems 39% 28% 20% Interactive whiteboards 38% 28% 21%
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Administrators: What factors influence you and your decisions for improving science education?
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Preparing today’s students for STEM careers Parents & Students: Importance of science and impact on STEM careers
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
Importance of learning science
Parents say:
To develop problem solving and critical thinking skills
To be successful
Students say:
To help me get into college
For a future job
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
Importance of learning science
Parents say:
To develop problem solving and critical thinking skills
To be successful
Students say:
To help me get into college
For a future job
12% say: not important for my future
21 st Century Science Education & Technology
STEM Careers
Parents say:
54% are likely to encourage a child to pursue a job in a STEM field
Factors that would influence that decision:
Child’s interest areas
Child’s academic strengths
21 st Century Science Education & Technology Students and STEM Careers
21 st Century Science Education & Technology What strategies do students say would help them get more interested in STEM careers?
Is your school doing a good job preparing you/your students/your child for future jobs?
Yes:
School Principals 66%
District Administrators 48%
Teachers 47%
Parents 43%
Is your school doing a good job preparing you/your students/your child for future jobs?
Yes:
School Principals 66%
District Administrators 48%
Teachers 47%
Parents 43%
Advanced tech students 23%
Is your school doing a good job preparing you/your students/your child for future jobs?
Download at: http://www.pasco.com/SpeakUp/ http://www.tomorrow.org/speakup/scienceReport.html Let’s discuss: http:// speakupblog.tomorrow.org / More Speak Up data? http:// www.tomorrow.org/speakup/index.html
Speak Up 2008 Fall 2008 Have a voice in national discussions Learn about the ideas of your own stakeholders Inform your plans, budgets and programs Participating schools and districts get free online access to your own quantitative data – with national benchmark data
Copyright Project Tomorrow 2008. This work is the intellectual property of the author. Permission is granted for this material to be shared for non-commercial, educational purposes, provided that this copyright statement appears on the reproduced materials and notice is given that the copying is by permission of the author. To disseminate otherwise or to republish requires written permission from the author. Thank you for your participation. Julie Evans [email_address]
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