Title: Michele Spitulnik
1The WISE Rock-Cycle Project Goals and
Assessments
- Michele Spitulnik Yael Kali
- Center for Innovative Learning Technologies
- Jim Slotta and Marcia Linn
- The Web-based Inquiry Science Environment
- University of California, Berkeley
2Web-based Learning Environments
- Scaffold students to use Web effectively
- Add inquiry to the science curriculum
- Support students as they work collaboratively
- Design technology that helps guide inquiry
- Inquiry maps to give procedural guidance
- Cognitive guidance on demand
- Embedded assessments
- Reflection notes
- Online discussions
- modeling, data visualizations
- Support teachers as they adopt new inquiry and
technology practices
3Web-based Inquiry Science Environment (WISE)
4Students investigate conditions for growing
plants in space
5Learning Environment Goals
- Make Science Accessible
- Use appropriate models, representations, content
- Choose topics, activities that students find
meaningful - Make Thinking Visible
- represent student and scientific ideas
- Use simulations, visualizations (e.g.,
Sensemaker) - Help Students Learn from Each Other
- Design social activities (e.g., debate) and
social supports - Peer review, collaborative search, online
discussions - Foster Lifelong Learning
- Help students become good science learners
- Critique, design, and argument activities
6WISE Components
Helping Teachers Assess Student Work
7WISE Components
The Sensemaker Argument Editor
8WISE Components
Online Discussions
9WISE Components
- Data Visualization, Drawing, Causal Mapping
10WISE Components
- Interactive Educational Media
Gene Flow Model Simulates flow of genes from
engineered crops to neighboring
plants Curricular use embeds model into
particular GMF contexts
11WISE Teachers and Students 42 months, 5/99 -
10/02
12WISE Partnerships
- School District Partnerships
- Enable district-wide inquiry and technology
program - Possibilities for professional development
research - Disciplinary Partnerships
- NOAA, NASA, Nat. Geographic, Monterey Bay Aq.
- Jointly develop curriculum projects
- Enable Mission of all partners
- Research Partnerships
- Educational or Cognitive researchers can use WISE
13WISE Research Partnership
- Provide a Pedagogical Framework
- Scaffolds curriculum design, review/revision
- Situates research innovations in a project
context - Provide a Technology Platform
- Web-based authoring, review of curriculum
- Web-based delivery to global audience
- Database of student assessments, project work
- Embedded Research -
- Enable Research questions are addressed through
experimental design
14The Rock-Cycle Partnership
- A WISE project adapted from a text-based
curriculum developed at the Weizmann Institute of
Science in Israel (Kali Orion, in review) - Designed for middle school students with focus on
the processes that transform materials within the
crust of the earth.
15Scientific Background
- The rock-cycle is a system including the crust
of the earth, which is characterized by a cyclic
and dynamic nature. The rocks exposed on the
surface of the earth are only a small sample in
time and space of constant material
transformation within the crust, driven by
geological processes (e.g. weathering,
sedimentation, burial, metamorphism, melting,
crystallization of molten rocks, uplift and
erosion)
The Rock-Cycle project currently focuses on only
one cycle - the formation and exposure of
magmatic rocks.
16Learning Goals
- To engage students in the critical thinking
processes associated with scientific inquiry - Students will engage in asking questions,
building models, collecting data and collating
evidence. - To support a systems-thinking approach
- Help promote students understanding of dynamic,
cyclic nature of the system (Kali, Orion,
Eylon, 2000). - To promote environmental literacy among students
- students begin to understand their local
environment and make informed decisions.
17Making Science Accessible
- Goal Engage students in a local context or
environment as basis for learning content and
processes (Orion, 1998). - Feature Introduction and final project connects
local environment to content within the project
The Introduction
The Final Project
18Making Science Accessible
- Goal Engage students in both hands-on and
online observations (Orion Hofstein, 1994). - Feature The environment provides structure and
prompts for students to make real world hands-on
observations
Students look at both online and real world rock
samples.
An Embedded Note
19Making Student Thinking Visible
- Goal Engage students in inquiry model
building (Spitulnik, 1998) - Features Students build models of geological
phenomena. For example, students use Salol to
model crystal formation. Students also build
relationship models to explain processes.
A student relationship model
Modeling Crystal Formation
20Making Student Thinking Visible
- Goal Engage students in building connections
between models and the phenomena they represent
(Grosslight, Unger, Jay, 1991 Kali Orion, in
review). - Feature Textual and visual cues prompt students
to explain relationships between experimental
procedures and models and the geological
processes they represent
Students build models of melting, rising and
cooling wax (magma) and relate the features of
their models to geological features.
An Embedded Note
21Promote Lifelong learning
- Goal Engage students in metacognitive reflection
of the scientific processes they are guided
through (Palinscar, 1984) - Feature Prompts provide metacognitive
scaffolding
Early in the project students reflect about models
Later in the project students revise hypotheses
22Facilitating Peer Learning
- Goal Engage students in discussions that support
debate and justification of ideas. (Linn Hsi,
2000) - Feature Student online discussion
Students debate the classification of obsidian in
an online discussion.
23Making Student Thinking Visible
- Goal Engage students in building connections
between concepts and different parts of the
project - Features Where are we going? steps make
explicit connections between ideas. Model
building activities also require creating
connections between ideas
An Embedded Note
24Scoring Rock-Cycle Assessments
- A Knowledge Integration Framework
- Scoring Rubric is on a 4 point scale
- Score 4 a high knowledge integration score and
indicates students hold a high degree of
understanding and demonstrate many relationships
between ideas. - Score 3 a good understanding of the
relationships involved - Score 2 a moderate understanding
- Score 1 an area that needs further development
- Score 0 indicates a lack of response.
25Scoring Rock-Cycle Assessments
- A Post Test Question An example
- How does granite rock form and why do we find it
on top of a mountain like Half Dome at Yosemite
National Park? - Combining a knowledge integration and systems
approach. Scoring proceeds with a 4 point scale
and is determined by how many pieces of the
system (starting material, place, process,
product) students include. - Score 4 Granite starts as magma underground
(starting material), cools slowly (process)
underground (place) and forms rock with big
crystals (product). The movement of earths
plates (process) causes mountains to form and
pushes rock, formed underground, to become
exposed. - Score 3 Three pieces of the system.
- Score 2 Two pieces of the system.
- Score 1 One piece of the system.
- Score 0 No response
26Scoring Rock-Cycle Assessments
- A Student Model An example
- Students create a relationship model to relate
the Beaker Experiment to the phenomenon it
represents
27Scoring Rock-Cycle Assessments
- A Student Model An example
- Scoring is based on two elements Representation
of the physical model or beaker experiment and
Links between the physical model and the real
world phenomena - Score 4 Physical model is represented before
and after heating an links are apparent between
physical model and phenomena (with words
including plutonic, volcanic, magma, outer crust,
vents) - Score 3 Physical Model is represented before
and after and a couple links are apparent (2 or 3
links) - Score 2 Physical Model is represented either
before or after and some links are apparent - Score 1 Physical Model is represented but no
links are apparent - Score 0 Students did not build a model.
- The previous example was scored a four.
28Conclusions
- The Rock-Cycle Projects represents
- An attempt to tie goals to assessments
- An attempt to integrate assessments into the
online learning environment - An attempt at scoring for knowledge integration
- Contact Info
- E-mail slotta_at_socrates.berkeley.edu
- Web http//wise.berkeley.edu