Title: PowerPoint Sunusu
1 HELPING TEACHERS INTEGRATE DESIGN ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY (DET) INTO THE CURRICULUM Steve
Krause skrause_at_asu.edu Ira A. Fulton
School of Engineering Chell Roberts chell.roberts
_at_asu.edu Ira A. Fulton School of
Engineering Dale Baker dale.baker_at_asu.edu
College of Education Sharon Robinson
Kurpius sharon.kurpius_at_asu.edu College of
Education Senay Yasar senay_at_asu.edu College of
Education Arizona State
University NSF Grant EEC0230726
http//www.eas.asu.edu/cme/ASUBEE
2 HELPING TEACHERS INTEGRATE DESIGN ENGINEERING
TECHNOLOGY (DET) INTO THE CURRICULUM Steve
Krause Chell Roberts Ira A. Fulton
School of Engineering Dale Baker, Sharon
Robinson Kurpius, Senay Yasar College of
Education Arizona State
University NSF Grant EEC0230726
- Objectives
- Document the effect of a course designed to help
teachers integrate Design, Engineering, and
Technology (DET) into their curriculum. - Describe the effect of the course through
- Changes in Knowledge
- Changes in Practice
- Reflections on Practice
- Intentions to Change Practice
- Conclusions
- Infusing DET into current practice is not an easy
matter but can be accomplished - Using iterative design process in designing unit
lessons was critical - Change occurred through a community of learners
who - Read and discussed research on classroom
applications - Discussed possible changes in their own practice
- Developed lessons, tried them, then shared their
successes and failures, and continually refined
their lessons - Students
- Learned more about DET
- Thought more about DET
- Had intentions to use DET in the future
- Without continuous support, the applicability of
intentions will depend on constraints such as
administration support, state test rankings, and
time supplies
- Case 3 DANA
- Project Her students designed labs and lab
instruments (e.g. calorimeter) - Changes in Knowledge
- Described DET with technical vocabulary
- Learned the iterative aspect of design
- Developed a reciprocal view of science and
technology - Changes in Practice
- Incorporated DET into her unit in various ways
- Helped other teachers incorporate DET
- Reflections on Practice
- First struggled to incorporate DET in her
classroom - Saw parallels between the design process and the
scientific method - Iterative process was hard for her students
- Providing everyday context was important but hard
to do with chemistry - Her students learned everything intended
- Future Intentions to Change Practice
- Wrote about outcomes and challenges of what she
was changing
- Case 2 DENISE
- Project Created a bridge building activity for
museum visitors - Changes in Knowledge
- Technology is not merely computers
- Design process is iterative
- Tinkering is not just playing
- Science technology are reciprocal
- Challenges teachers face in teaching DET
- Reflections on Practice
- More attention to gender equity
- Integrated design process and tinkering in
lessons - Aware of he rime needs for hands-on exploration
- Course Organization
- A team of 2 education, 2 engineering, and a
graduate student - A graduate course in science education
- Weekly class meetings at an industrial
engineering lab - Course activities included
- Weekly reflections and discussions of research
articles - Hands-on activities (e.g. nutcrackers bone
structure) - Iterative process for building unit lessons
- Methodology Sample
- Case study approach
- Alice
- 3rd grade teacher at a private school
- 5 teaching experience
- Has good science background
- Denise
- Works at a science center
- Teacher professional development and educational
outreach - Has weak science background
- Dana
- High school honors chemistry teacher
- 15 teaching experience
- Strong science background
- Recommendations
- Infusing DET into k-12 requires a community of
learners who provides support to one another - Engineering educators who wish to infuse DET into
curriculum should familiarize themselves with the
curricular and testing constraints teachers face
(Alice was the most successful because she had
the least constraints)
Calorimeter Lab Designs Q M.C. ?T
NARST, April 5, 2005 Dallas, Texas
- Data Source
- Pre/post questionnaires
- Written and verbal reflections
- Email correspondence
- 2 focus groups
- DET unit and report
http//www.eas.asu.edu/cme/ASUBEE