A longitudinal study of early elementary students’ understanding of lunar phenomena after planetarium and classroom instruction

December 1st, 2014 | RESEARCH

We examined the durability of students’ understanding of lunar phenomena one year after a combination of planetarium and classroom lessons. Children (N=16) were interviewed before and after instruction during Year 1 and then again one year later. Analysis of the interview results and instruction reveals that many students retained an understanding of some of the key constructs targeted in the program. Results also suggest that students were more likely to learn and remember challenging constructs that they actively engaged with in both the planetarium and the classroom.

Document

Small_Plummer_Planetarian_final_2014.pdf

Team Members

Pennsylvania State University, Contributor
Julia Plummer, Co-Principal Investigator, Pennsylvania State University
Arcadia University, Contributor

Citation

Publication: The Planetarian
Volume: 43
Number: 4
Page(s): 18

Tags

Audience: Educators | Teachers | Elementary School Children (6-10) | Museum | ISE Professionals
Discipline: Education and learning science | Space science
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Media and Technology | Planetarium and Science on a Sphere