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Archive | 2016

Citizen Science: Connecting to Nature Through Networks

Brigid Barron; Caitlin K. Martin; Véronique Mertl; Mohamed Yassine

Citizen science projects represent an important example of mass collaboration at a global scale where nonscientists can contribute to science research across geographical locations. To more broadly and deeply capitalize on the potential for citizen science to invigorate inquiry-based science at school, we need to better understand how and why citizen science opportunities are taken up by particular teachers. In this chapter, we offer a framework for the analysis of conditions that influence voluntary participation in citizen science efforts. The framework is developed with empirical data from a longitudinal case study. The framework focuses on four dimensions that contributed sustained and evolving participation: (1) alignment between the citizen science opportunity with personal interests and teaching goals, (2) access to a networked community with curricular resources and a technical infrastructure, (3) an integrated indoor and outdoor classroom space that promoted place-based inquiry opportunities, and (4) a set of collaborative practices and networked opportunities that created conditions for an expanding set of partnerships. We close with a discussion of how the design of the socio-technical dimensions of citizen science efforts might be informed by both ethnographic and quantitative studies.


Archive | 2010

How Students Come to Be, Know, and Do: Conclusion

Leslie Rupert Herrenkohl; Véronique Mertl

Studies of learning are too frequently conceptualized only in terms of knowledge development. Yet it is vital to pay close attention to the social and emotional aspects of learning in order to understand why and how it occurs. How Students Come to Be, Know, and Do builds a theoretical argument for and a methodological approach to studying learning in a holistic way. The authors provide examples of urban fourth graders from diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds studying science as a way to illustrate how this model contributes to a more complete and complex understanding of learning in school settings. What makes this book unique is its insistence that to fully understand human learning we have to consider the affective-volitional processes of learning along with the more familiar emphasis on knowledge and skills. Developing interest, persisting in the face of difficulty, actively listening to others’ ideas, accepting and responding to feedback, and challenging ideas are crucial dimensions of students’ experiences that are often ignored.


Archive | 2010

How Students Come to Be, Know, and Do: A Case for a Broad View of Learning

Leslie Rupert Herrenkohl; Véronique Mertl


computer supported collaborative learning | 2009

Repertoires of collaborative practice

Brigid Barron; Caitlin K. Martin; Emma Mercier; Roy D. Pea; Daniel J. Steinbock; Sarah E. Walter; Leslie Rupert Herrenkohl; Véronique Mertl; Kersti Tyson


international conference of learning sciences | 2010

Supporting young new media producers across learning spaces: a longitudinal study of the digital youth network

Brigid Barron; Amber Levinson; Caitlin K. Martin; Véronique Mertl; Daniel Stringer; Kimberly Austin; Nichole Pinkard; Kimberly Richards; Kimberly Gomez


Archive | 2010

How Students Come to Be, Know, and Do: How Students Come to Be, Know, and Do

Leslie Rupert Herrenkohl; Véronique Mertl


international conference of learning sciences | 2008

Mapping the learning pathways and processes associated with the development of expertise and learner identities

Leah A. Bricker; Philip Bell; Suzanne Reeve; Brigid Barron; Nichole Pinkard; Kimberly Gomez; Caitlin K. Martin; Akili Lee; Mark Chen; Heather Toomey Zimmerman; Carrie Tzou; Giovanna Scalone; Christopher M. Hoadley; Sameer Honwad; Véronique Mertl; Laurie McCarthy; Reed Stevens; Sheldon Levias; Flávio S. Azevedo


international conference of learning sciences | 2008

Analyzing collaborative contexts: professional musicians, corporate engineers, and communities in the himalayas

Véronique Mertl; Timothy Kieran O'Mahony; Kersti Tyson; Leslie Rupert Herrenkohl; Sameer Honwad; Christopher Hoadley


international conference of learning sciences | 2006

At home with mathematics: meanings and uses among families

Reed Stevens; Véronique Mertl; Sheldon Levias; Laurie McCarthy; Shelley Goldman; Lee Martin; Roy D. Pea; Angela Booker; Kristen Pilner Blair; Na'ilah Suad Nasir; Michael Heimlich; Grace Atukpawu; Kathleen O'Connor


Archive | 2010

How Students Come to Be, Know, and Do: Titles in the series

Leslie Rupert Herrenkohl; Véronique Mertl

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Kersti Tyson

University of Washington

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Sheldon Levias

University of Washington

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Carrie Tzou

University of Washington

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