Midwest Wild Weather – Summative Evaluation

January 1st, 2003 | EVALUATION

Evidence from the data collected on the Midwest Wild Weather Project indicates that the teachers are very excited about its potential for increasing their students' science literacy and understanding of the scientific process, as well as increasing their knowledge of the weather and exciting them about science in general. Students are very focused, enthusiastic and excited when interacting with the exhibits and universally pleased with their exploration and explainer experiences. MWW is also effectively reaching the intended underserved and underrepresented students across the nine sites are being involved and exposed to the benefits of MWW. The public was involved via weather events at the nine museums and science centers and the collaborative relationship among the consortium members is exemplary and ninety-seven percent (97%) of teachers queried felt it was definitively a good use of tax dollars. The appendix of this report includes the pre- and post-test used by teachers in this study to assess changes in student learning.

Document

report_125.pdf

Team Members

Gregory Aloia, Evaluator, Florida Atlantic University
SciTech Hands On Museum, Contributor

Funders

Funding Source: NSF
Funding Program: ISE/AISL
Award Number: 9815087
Funding Amount: 1621716

Related URLs

Midwestern Wild Weather Project

Tags

Audience: Educators | Teachers | Elementary School Children (6-10) | Evaluators | General Public | Museum | ISE Professionals
Discipline: General STEM | Geoscience and geography | Nature of science
Resource Type: Evaluation Reports | Research and Evaluation Instruments | Summative | Test
Environment Type: Exhibitions | Museum and Science Center Exhibits | Museum and Science Center Programs | Public Programs

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This material is supported by National Science Foundation award DRL-2229061, with previous support under DRL-1612739, DRL-1842633, DRL-1212803, and DRL-0638981. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations contained within InformalScience.org are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of NSF.

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