Developing Young Researchers: 15 Years of Authentic Science Experiences for K-12 with NASA's S'COOL Project
Abstract
In late 1996, members of the Atmospheric Science Directorate at NASA's Langley Research Center decided that there had to be a better way to share the excitement of our research than black and white, text-heavy Fact Sheets. We invited a group of local teachers to a half-day session on Center to help guide an improved approach. We suggested a variety of approaches to them, and asked for feedback. They were eager for anything other than black and white Fact Sheets! Fortunately, one local middle school science teacher took us up on the offer to stick around and talk over lunch. In that conversation, she said that anything that would connect the science her kids studied in the classroom to the outside world - especially to NASA! - would be very motivating to her students. From that conversation was born the Students' Cloud Observations On-Line (S'COOL Project), now a nearly 16-year experiment in K-12 science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) engagement. S'COOL is the Education and Public Outreach (EPO) arm of the Clouds and the Earth's Radiant Energy System (CERES) project, and involves K-12 students as a source of ground truth for satellite cloud retrievals. It was designed from the beginning as a 2-way project, with communication of information from the students to NASA, but also from NASA back to the students. With technology evolution since the project began, we have continued to enhance this focus on 2-way interaction. S'COOL involves students with observation skills, math skills (to compute cloud cover from multiple observers or convert units), geography skills (locating their school on a map and comparing to satellite imagery), and exposes them to cutting edge engineering in the form of a series of NASA satellites. As a priority Earth Observing Instrument, CERES currently flies on Terra, Aqua and NPP, with an additional instrument in development for JPSS. Students are involved in occasional Intensive Observing Periods (as with the launch of NPP), and are connected to ongoing NASA developments through the Observe Your World blog (previously a monthly email and before that a monthly print newsletter). Ten years into the project, an external evaluator performed an assessment. Among her findings: - Teachers felt strongly that the project was useful, and that it kept students engaged. - Several teachers commented that the project often brought out leadership qualities and sparked interest in students who were reluctant to participate in regular classroom activities. - Students loved the idea that they were helping NASA conduct real research. - Even teachers who did not use the program spoke highly of it, and hoped to someday have the time to fully engage. This assessment provided confirmation that the S'COOL Project was on the right track. Recommendations to further improve the project, especially through enhancements to the website, have been and continue to be implemented. This presentation will share lessons learned through the course of this project, and share metrics and statistics on participation and impact.
- Publication:
-
AGU Fall Meeting Abstracts
- Pub Date:
- December 2012
- Bibcode:
- 2012AGUFMED21E..02C
- Keywords:
-
- 0805 EDUCATION / Elementary and secondary education;
- 3311 ATMOSPHERIC PROCESSES / Clouds and aerosols