Title: PROJECT MAST Mississippi Academy for Science Teaching
1 PROJECT MAST Mississippi Academy for Science
Teaching
- Sheila Smith
- Co-Principal Investigator
- Jackson Public Schools (JPS)
-
- Mehri Fadavi
- Principal Investigator
- Jackson State University (JSU)
QEM MSP Workshop Baltimore, MD June 11, 2009
2About JSU
- Located in Jackson, the capital city and the
cultural, political, geographic and business
center of Mississippi, the campus is a scenic
125-acre tract only five minutes from downtown
and less than twenty minutes from Jackson
International Airport. - Since 1877, Jackson State University has been
providing young men and women opportunities that
will empower them to succeed in an increasingly
complex world. As the Urban University of
Mississippi, Jackson State emphasizes public
service programs designed to enhance quality of
life and seek solutions to urban problems in the
physical, social, intellectual, and economic
environments.
3About JPS
- With nearly 31,000 students enrolled, the Jackson
Public School District is the second largest and
only urban school district in Mississippi. More
than 83 of Jackson's school-age children attend
one of our 59 schools. These students represent
almost 1/5 of Jackson's total population. Our
student population is larger than the populations
of all but 7 Mississippi cities and larger than
54 Mississippi counties. - The district has 59 schools 8 high schools,10
middle schools, 38 elementary schools, 2 special
schools, and a Career Development Center.
4EVOLUTION OF MAST
- 2004 2005 Mississippi Academy for Science
Teaching I - Middle SchoolPhysical, Earth, Space and Life
Science - MSP/Mississippi Department of Education
- 2005 2006 Mississippi Academy for Science
Teaching II - Middle SchoolPhysical, Earth, Space and Life
Science and Pre-Algebra and Algebra - MSP/Mississippi Department of Education
- 2006 2007 Mississippi Academy for Science
Teaching III - Middle SchoolPhysical, Earth, Space and Life
Science and Pre-Algebra and Algebra - MSP/Mississippi Department of Education
- 2007 2010 Mississippi Academy for Science
Teaching 4U - Middle SchoolPhysical, Earth, Space, and
Environmental Science and reading (science
literacy) - MSP/Mississippi Department of Education
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6Project MAST 4U
From conceptual understanding to exemplary
practice in science education
7MAST and MAST 4U
8Goals
- Provide professional development for science
teachers designed to improve skills related to
inquiry-based teaching in grades 5-8
- Improve content knowledge in physical science,
life science, and earth and space science
9Objectives
- Support improved student achievement in science
- Engage in two content-rich graduate courses
- Interact with faculty from across the United
States - Participate in classroom visits four times during
the academic school year
10MAST 4U
- Implementation Design Qualities
11Timeline
- Two-week long summer sessions of intensive
professional development in physics, space
science, Understanding by Design (UbD), and
science literacy at JSU - Fall and spring programs include nine Saturdays
of intensive professional development in
chemistry, earth science, environmental science,
UbD, and science literacy at JSU.
12Example
- Year 3 summer, fall spring schedule
- June 7 (Sunday afternoon), June 8-12 and June
15-19 (800 a.m.- 500 p.m.) - September 5 19 October 3, 17 31 November
14 (2009) January 16 30 February 13 (2010) - (800 a.m. - 500 p.m.)
13Other Key Features
- Inquiry-based content aligned to the MS Science
Framework and the National Science Education
Standards - Access to the resources at JSU such as SMART
(Science and Math Advance Resources for Teaching)
Center, Astronomy Café, JSU observatories and
observatories in Arizona, Hawaii, and Australia
14Science Partnerships
- Select Mississippi School Districts
- Cornell University
- New York
- Delta Education
- Texas
- Open Virtual Education Space
- New York
- Mississippi State University
- Berkley/Lawrence Hall of Science
- California
- PASCO
- California
- The SkyCalls Program
- Florida
- Ironwood Observatory
- Hawaii
- James Cook Universitys Center for Astronomy
- Australia
15Faculty Guest Instructors
- Dianna Nunez
- NASA
- Wayne Synder
- CA Technical University
- Steve Roberts (K-12)
- New Hampshire
- David Theseng
- Illinois
- Lillie Akin
- Texas
- Paul Williams (K-12)
- Vermont
- Tony Phillips
- NASA
- George Lebo
- University of Florida
- Jim Overhiser
- New York
- Minadene Waldrop (K-12)
- Mississippi
- JSU Department of Physics
- JSU Department of Chemistry
- MS Science Teachers Association
-
16School Year Classroom VisitsFour School Visits
from MAST Faculty and Staff
- Implementation of MAST activities into daily
instructional practices - MAST faculty and staff visit participating
schools to demonstrate how to incorporate
innovative technology (IPODs) in teaching and
learning science - Portable planetarium travels to schools and all
teachers and students in participating schools
visit and enjoy this great activity - Mentoring and support in designing and
implementation of UbD lesson plan units
17Ipod Visits
18Planetarium Visits
19Participation Incentives
- Tuition for 6 graduate credits for use toward
re-certification or to apply toward a masters
degree (approximate value 1,600) - Stipend (2000) for teachers attending summer and
spring and fall sessions - Travel expense reimbursement for those living
more than 50 miles from JSU including mileage,
hotel, and food - Other participants will be reimbursed for
mileage. - Teachers will receive instructional materials
from all MAST sessions to use in their own
classrooms. - Reimbursement for participation in national,
state, and local science conferences
20Geographic (MS Counties) Participation MAST
MAST 4U Programs
21Project MAST and MAST 4U
- Success Stories
-
- Achievements
22MAST 1
Subject Average -Pretest Average-- Post test Change
Physics Space Science 37 40 8
Meteorology 50 76 52
Chemistry 24 56 133
Biology 58 78 34
Earth Science 38 76 100
- 67 Teachers
- 41 Schools
- 22 Districts
- 14 Counties
23MAST II
Subject Average -Pretest Average-- Post test Change
Physics 44 65 48
Space Science 44 66 50
Chemistry 40 68 70
Biology 58 64 10
Earth Science 34 61 79
- 82 Teachers
- 46 Schools
- 32 Districts
- 18 Counties
24MAST III
- 86 Teachers
- 51 Schools
- 31 Districts
- 10 Counties
Subject Average -Pretest Average-- Post test Change
Physics 32 48 50
Space Science 44 60 36
Chemistry 58 74 27
Biology 37 70 89
Pre-Algebra 50 69 38
25MAST 4U Year I
- 49 Teachers
- 29 Schools
- 14 Districts
- 12 Counties
Subject Average -Pretest Average-- Post test Change
Physics 44 62 41
Space Science 41 62 51
Chemistry 44 65 48
Environmental Science 48 68 42
Earth Science 38 48 26
26MAST 4U Year II
Subject Average -Pretest Average-- Post test Change
Physics NA NA NA
Space Science NA NA NA
Chemistry NA NA NA
Environmental Science NA NA NA
Earth Science NA NA NA
- 45 Teachers
- 29 Schools
- 14 Districts
- 12 Counties
27MAST 4U Participant
- Chasity Buckner,a teacher from Siwell Middle
School, has been selected by the NSTA Awards and
Recognitions Committee as a recipient for the
2007 Maitland P. Simmons Memorial Award for New
Teachers. The award consists of up to 1,000 to
be used to attend the annual national conference.
28MAST 4U Participants
- Two JPS teachers have been awarded the Maitland
P. Simmons Memorial Award for New Teachers. They
are Pamela Osborne and Anitra Cooper from Peeples
Middle School. The Maitland P. Simmons Memorial
Award for New Teachers provides selected teachers
in their first five years of teaching with 1,000
to be used to attend the annual National
Conference on Science Education. Award recipients
will be mentored, tracked, and provided with
continuing opportunities for meaningful
involvement with NSTA and its activities. - Anitra Cooper, Peeples Middle School
- Mississippi Middle School Teacher of the
Year - The Mississippi Science Teachers
Association (MSTA) named Peeples science teacher
Anitra Cooper the 2008 Mississippi Middle School
Science Teacher of the Year. MSTA recognizes one
middle school science teacher who has
demonstrated exemplary, creative science
teaching using hands-on science teaching
materials, innovative teaching strategies,
stimulating students' interest in science and the
learning of science.
29MAST ParticipantsMSTA Science Conference
30Expected Outcomes
- Improve the learning and teaching of science in
the middle grades by engaging teachers in
meaningful experiences designed to increase
content knowledge and promote interest in science - Improve teacher quality by providing a
self-sustaining and reflective system of
professional development to improve instructional
practices
31MAST
- National Science Foundation
- 2008-2013
- High School
- Physical Science, Chemistry, and Physics Teachers
32 Letters of Commitment MS School Districts
33MAST High School
- Needs Assessment
- Goals Objectives
- Implementation Design Qualities
- Expected Outcomes
34Needs Assessment
- Improve content-based instruction in secondary
physical science classrooms - New high school graduation and IHL requirements
- Low number of high qualified secondary physical
science teachers - Incorporation of innovative instructional
technology
35Endangered Species
36Goals
- Improve the learning and teaching of science in
high school physical science classrooms by
engaging teachers in meaningful experiences
designed to increase content knowledge and
promote interest and achievement in science - Improve teacher quality by providing a
self-sustaining system of education and
professional development designed to improve
student learning
37MAST Objectives
- Pre-service initiative to establish undergraduate
physics and physical science programs leading to
teacher licensure - Increase the number of highly qualified science
teachers among minorities and women - Decrease the science teacher shortage
- In-service professional development for science
teachers designed to improve skills related to
inquiry-based teaching and designed to improve
content knowledge in physical science,chemistry,
physics, and earth and space science
38Implementation Design Qualities
39Partnership-Driven
- 41 Mississippi School Districts
- Jackson State University
- Mississippi Department of Education
- 12 Other Partners
40Timeline
- Two-week long summer sessions of intensive
professional development in physics, physical
science, chemistry, and earth and space science
at JSU - June 7 (Sunday afternoon), June 8-12 and June
15-19 (800 a.m. - 500 p.m.) - Fall and spring program includes 10 Saturdays of
intensive professional development in chemistry,
physics, physical science, and earth science at
JSU - September 5 19 October 3, 17 31
November 14 (2009) - January 16 30, February 13 March 6
(2010)
41AGENDA
- Group I
- 815 1000 Stein
- 1000 1015 Break
- 1015 1200 Stein
- 1200 100 Lunch
- 100 245 Nucci
- 245 300 Break
- 300 445 Nucci
- 445 500 Evaluation
- Group II
- 815 1000 Nucci
- 1000 1015 Break
- 1015 1200 Nucci
- 1200 100 Lunch
- 100 245 Stein
- 245 300 Break
- 300 445 Stein
- 445 500 Evaluation
42Other Key Features
- Teachers engaged in 20 days of content workshops
(6 hours of graduate credit - Support pre-service teachers to become secondary
certified science teachers (physics, chemistry,
physical science, or space science) - Provide online professional development resources
43Other Key Features
- Establishment of pre-service physical science
education program at JSU - MAST curricula aligned with state and national
standards - Three visits to participants classrooms during
academic year - Research-based professional development on
inquiry-based learning and innovative technology
programs
44Other Key Features
- Memberships and opportunities to participate in
state and national science conferences - Instructional materials and resources for their
classrooms - Participate in space science activities using
observatories located at JSU, Hawaii, and
Australia
45Expected Outcomes
- Increase student achievement and desire to become
active participants in science by improving
teachers content knowledge in physical science,
physics, chemistry, and space science - Provide teachers with research-based teaching
strategies - Increase the number of highly qualified physical
science, physics, chemistry, and space science
teachers in Mississippi
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48Questions