Title: Education, Outreach, and Training Meeting
1Education, Outreach, and Training Meeting
- Introduction to Chickscope
- July 1998
- Umesh Thakkar
- National Center for Supercomputing Applications
- University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Champaign, IL 61820
- 217-333-2095
- uthakkar_at_ncsa.uiuc.edu
2Outline
- In this introduction, I will summarize
- The first Chickscope project (Spring 1996)
- Illinois Chickscope, a professional development
program for K-12 teachers - Significance of remote scientific instrumentation
in education
3What is Chickscope?(http//chickscope.beckman.uiu
c.edu/)
- Chickscope is a project to study chicken embryo
development using a variety of educational
resources, such as inquiry-based curriculum
materials, interactive modules on egg
mathematics, image processing, and remotely
controlled magnetic resonance imaging instrument.
- It is being developed by educators and
researchers from several UIUC departments in
collaboration with inservice and preservice
teachers, and the Image Processing for Teaching
project at the University of Arizona. - Inquiry-based materials by collaborating teachers
are at - http//www.ed.uiuc.edu/inquiry/.
- Chickscope overview for parents and teachers is
at http//chickscope.beckman.uiuc.edu/about/overvi
ew/.
4Remote scientific instrumentation
- Using a standard Web browser, researchers,
teachers, or students in any location and at any
time have the potential to access the latest
scientific instruments without having to travel
to a remote site or invest in the hardware
themselves. - Accordingly, the Web becomes a laboratory for
many fields of research and educationa World
Wide Laboratory (WWL). - Chickscope is a working example of the WWL
project. - In addition to Chickscope, there are other
innovative scientific instrumentation projects on
the Web (e.g., Stardial, an autonomous
astronomical camera).
Seventh-grade students learning about MRI
acquisitions during the first Chickscope project
5Overview of project design
- An interactive web site
- School pages
- MRI control interface and database
- Scratchings (observations and questions)
- Roost (expert responses, etc.)
- Designing for instruction and interaction
- Focus on interests, needs, and skills of
participants - Encourage exploration everyday
- Provide support for guiding the scientific
inquiry process
6Participants in the first Chickscope project
- The ten participating classrooms during the
spring of 1996 ranged from kindergarten to high
school, including an after-school science club
and an out-of-state home school. - In all, there were 210 students, 9 teachers, and
15 undergraduate students in the classrooms. - Teachers selected based on their school or
classroom access to the Internet, interest in the
project, and plans for integrating it into their
curriculum. - Teacher training prior to and during the project.
- A Sample Scenario Primary School Classroom
7Primary school classroom
- 24 students (10 girls, 14 boys half
kindergarten, half first grade) - Undergraduate student assisting the classroom
teacher - 2 Macintosh IIsi with access to the Internet 1
classroom incubator - Sample activities Slice hard-boiled eggs to see
how MRI would "slice" the egg. Identify the
three available views (front, top, and side) on
their acquired images. Write scratchings to
share observations and ask questions.
8Sample primary classroom activities
9MRI acquisitions
- All classrooms had remote access to the MRI
system twice a week for 20 minutes each day,
except the after-school science club which had
access once a week for 2 hours. - Experts suggested good starting points to
students everyday on the MRI control interface
for acquiring images. - Annotations and observations by experts to record
the chick embryo development process for the
benefit of all classrooms.
10Sample primary school image acquisition
11It is MRI time primary school classroom
- Six to eight primary students per group for image
acquisitions. - Look at quadrant F3. We are looking at the top
view. What do you think we could do next? What
do you think the white spots are? Teacher
leading a discussion in the classroom - The bright spots above and below it heart area
are signals from the blood in the ventricle.
These spots are in the wrong places because they
are moving too rapidly. Expert observations and
annotations
12Annotations
13Annotations (cont.)
14Sample MRI explorations
- Primary schoolchildren made comparable attempts
to manipulate parameters for MRI explorations. - 722 actual acquisition requests from all
participating classrooms. - Online guide, Getting the Most out of MRI,
developed to provide students with advice on
image acquisition strategies.
15Scratchings
- Scratchings about classroom activities, chick
embryo development, and MR images. - Experts responded daily in the Roost and gave
procedural guidance and cognitive guidance to
students and teachers.
16Sample primary school scratching
17Sample expert response
18Sample scratching practices
- Each classroom had its own story in writing
scratchings. - Observations and questions also sent via a
mailing list. - Sample illustration of scratchings by selected
classrooms from different grade levels.
19Impact in classrooms (http//www.ed.uiuc.edu/facs
taff/chip/Publications/chickscope/)
- Situated evaluation approach to examine how
Chickscope is used across different classroom
contexts. - General questions to guide our understanding of
the project - How useful is MR imaging (with and without remote
access) for understanding chick embryo
development? - What different modalities are available to
students? - What are students learning from this experience?
- What kinds of support structure is provided to
teachers? - What are some of the unexpected events?
20Situated evaluation of educational innovations
- Situated evaluation is focused on the
innovation-in-use across contexts (Bruce and
Rubin, 1993). - Some of the purposes of situated evaluation
include - explain why the innovation was used the way it
was - predict the results of using the innovation
- identify similarities and differences across
settings - improve the use of the innovation
- improve the technology
- identify variables for later evaluation
21Situated evaluation process
- The situated evaluation process has three key
aspects - understand the idealization of the innovation
- examine the settings in which the innovation
appears - analyze the realizations of the innovation
- The guiding assumption in the process is that the
innovation comes into being through use.
22Lessons learned
- Students working in groups were able to share
computers and limited MRI time effectively to do
serious science for an extended period. - Students more involved in Chickscope when it was
integrated into the classroom curriculum plans. - In spite of the complexity of the technology,
students and teachers across K-12 were able to
benefit.
23Diverse range of benefits
- Exposure to a new way of using the Internet.
- Increased understanding of the process of
gathering scientific data. - Opportunity to interact with scientists from
several disciplines. - Motivation for learning science and sustained
interest in the scientific enterprise (i.e., at
least 21 days). - Continuing sustained use of resulting project
materials by classrooms that did not originally
participate or have access to the remote
instrumentation.
24Implications for K-12 outreach from the first
Chickscope project
- Access to new technologies should be possible
through standard computer hardware and software,
such as Web browsers. - Online interactions with experts is essential for
doing scientific investigations, especially for
students in the lower grades who may need
specific guidance as well as immediate feedback.
25Why Illinois Chickscope?
- The first Chickscope project was successful in
immersing students and teachers in a small
scientific community. Students and teachers
learned much about how to collect and analyze
data, how to ask questions, and how to
communicate their findings with others (Bruce et
al, 1997). - Planned to scale this project up to provide
further opportunities to students and teachers at
state and national levels. - Proposed a professional development program, now
referred to as Illinois Chickscope (ILCS), for
K-12 teachers during the spring, summer, and fall
semesters of 1998 (Bruce and Thakkar, 1997
Potter, 1997). - ILCS was initially proposed as Champaign County
Chickscope (CCC) before teachers from
east-central Illinois got involved.
26Illinois Chickscope(http//www.ed.uiuc.edu/facst
aff/chip/Projects/Chickscope/ccc.html)
- Illinois Chickscope is building a community of
teachers linking that community with scientists
in a variety of disciplines promoting an
integrated understanding in science and
mathematics and teaching new ways of using the
Internet. - ILCS participants are 32 K-12 teachers (21
elementary school teachers, 4 middle school
teachers, and 7 high school teachers) from 15
schools in Champaign County and
Charleston-Mattoon area. - ILCS started by introducing Chickscope to 57
preservice teachers in fall of 1997 so that these
teachers can take their new pedagogical knowledge
into their student teaching, including in the
classrooms of the ILCS teachers.
27ILCS objectives
- ILCS objectives include
- To demonstrate what is required to scale up a
successful local project to a larger community. - To build collaborations between teachers,
preservice teachers, and scientists in order to
promote and facilitate scientific investigations
using the Internet. - To test the information infrastructure by
providing a diverse range of classrooms with
access to the interactive MRI database. - To assess the effectiveness of Illinois
Chickscope in motivating and preparing teachers
for incorporating inquiry-based learning and
teaching in science and mathematics classrooms.
28ILCS inservice schedule
- ILCS teachers are expected to attend 11 inservice
days. Each - day includes interactive discussions, hands-on,
and computer- - based activities related to chick embryology and
MR imaging. - During the spring semester, the teachers were
learning about Chickscope through five inservice
days. - During a week-long summer inservice, the teachers
focussed on developing inquiry-based curriculum
materials for use in their classrooms. - During the fall semester the teachers will return
for one day of inservice, where they will
introduce the ILCS project to new preservice
teachers and other interested teachers.
29Inquiry themes
- Inquiry themes during inservice focus on a broad
question - How do we build a community for inquiry learning?
- How do we get students to engage in inquiry?
- How do we ensure that all students are involved
in inquiry activities? - How do teachers link to other teachers and
student teachers to facilitate inquiry learning
and teaching? - What are the roles for scientists in supporting
inquiry in the classroom? - How can teachers study their own inquiry practice
and share what they learn with others?
30ILCS evaluation procedures
- ILCS evaluation questions will focus on the
project objectives. For instance, what is
required to scale up? Is collaboration among
classroom teachers, preservice teachers, and
scientists supported? How well does the
information infrastructure work? Are teachers
supported in inquiry-based teaching? - A formative evaluation is being conducted to
guide the project development. - A summative evaluation during the summer and fall
semesters will assess the overall impact of the
project. - A variety of data is being collected for
evaluation. Appropriate consent from teachers,
preservice teachers, school, and university has
been obtained before the start of the project.
31ILCS and scientific instrumentation?
- The goal for the Chickscope project was not only
to provide students and teachers with access to
the MRI instrument, but also to provide them with
the supporting infrastructure that is usually
reserved for scientists. - It is difficult to sustain the infrastructure of
both the people and the underlying technology for
a long duration. - ILCS teachers (and their students) will be using
images from the MRI database to learn about
embryonic development and growth for instance,
studying the change in the yolk occurring between
24 to 72 hours of development (see, for example,
http//chickscope.beckman.uiuc.edu/explore/biologi
cal_imaging). - The database includes MR images acquired by
students during the first Chickscope project.
32Significance in education
- Remote scientific instrumentation is part of the
daily practice in research and industry (e.g.,
Mars Pathfinder mission). - Students at all levels may need to learn more
about this new technology for doing science, and
that it is likely to be less costly in the future
(e.g., electronic mail). - The particular instruments and scientific domains
may change, but understanding the principles
underlying this mode of learning through projects
like Chickscope should be generalizable to other
domains, such as cell biology, involving new
technologies, such as transmission electron
microscope.
33Current directions
- I am working on a review of scientific
instrumentation projects in many domains, such as
radio astronomy, cell biology, and nanomaterials. - My interest is in evaluation of WWL technologies
to understand their impact in research and
education for instance, - What effect WWL technologies have on student
learning? - How WWL technologies support scientific
collaboration and expand participation in science?
34Acknowledgements
- I wish to acknowledge UIUC collaborators
- Illinois Chickscope
(Dr. Bertram
C. Bruce, Maureen P. Hogan, Alexis P. Benson,
Dean J. Grosshandler, Jonathan A. Moore) - Remote scientific instrumentation
- (Clint S. Potter, Dr. Bridget O. Carragher,
Dr. Peter R. McCullough, Dr. Ray L. Plante) - Clint Potter initiated the first Chickscope
project and continues to - direct its present development. Chickscope is
funded in part by the - Illinois Board of Higher Education, the UIUC
Campus Research - Board, and the Lumpkin Foundation and the
Illinois Consolidated - Telephone Company.