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FOSS: Research: Middle School Multimedia Evaluation
By Dr. Rebecca Deutscher, Lawrence Hall of Science, University
of California at Berkeley

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FOSS is in the process of evaluating the
multimedia component of the nine middle school courses
(Electronics, Weather
and Water, Diversity
of Life, Populations
and Ecosystems, Human
Brain and Senses, Force
and Motion, Planetary
Science, Earth
History, and Chemical
Interactions). Some
of you probably were contacted this past spring about
completing an online survey. The survey was e-mailed
to teachers and FOSS professional developers who have
been working with the middle school FOSS courses.
Approximately 700 participants completed the survey,
which focused on how the multimedia component of
FOSS is being used in classrooms and workshops.
There are four main areas that are being examined
in the multimedia survey. The first area is the school
environment. The FOSS team is interested in the
number of students using the multimedia, types of
schools and classrooms, and how the classrooms are
set up. Certain types of classrooms may be more
conducive for using the FOSS multimedia. There
are also different teaching styles and classroom
environments that are of interest.
The second area involves looking at the technology teachers
have in their schools. The FOSS team is interested in how many
students per computer, what kind of technology the school has,
where students generally use computers, if the students have
access to the Internet, etc. FOSS wants to better understand the
realities of science classroom technology in order to improve
access to the multimedia. It is expected that in some schools the
multimedia will be presented more as a demonstration because
there are not enough computers in the classroom for students to
access the multimedia. Other classrooms have multiple computer
stations in their classrooms or even class sets of laptops. Other
schools make computer labs available.
The third area involves examining FOSS multimedia on a
general level. The FOSS team is interested in what courses
teachers are using and how they are using the multimedia.
The team is also interested in general impressions of the
multimedia, whether teachers are following the teacher guide
recommendations for using the multimedia, whether they
received professional development on the FOSS multimedia,
and whether they like the general format of the system.
The final area FOSS is examining is the specific multimedia
components within each course. Teachers gave us feedback about
whether they are using specific sites and rated how much these
particular sites affect student learning. They also gave us feedback
about the usability and the help features for each course.
Another aspect of this study involved surveying FOSS
professional developers on whether they include the multimedia
component when doing a workshop. The FOSS team is
interested in what experiences teachers have with the multimedia
during a FOSS middle school workshop. Is there a link between
teachers who use the FOSS multimedia and those who have it as
part of their professional development?
By collecting this data, the FOSS staff will have a better
understanding of how teachers use the multimedia componen of FOSS. This information
then can be used to improve professional development, teacher guides, and the
multimedia itself in future versions. In addition, the FOSS team is interested
in whether teachers feel the multimedia enhances student learning.
Currently the data from this study is being analyzed and the
results should be known in the next few months. If you have
any further questions, feel free to contact me at fossresearch@
berkeley.edu.
Thank you to all of the teachers and FOSS professional
developers who participated! We greatly appreciate all your
feedback.
Dr. Rebecca Deutscher is a Research Associate
Specialist at the Lawrence Hall of Science. She is currently
evaluating the multimedia component of the FOSS middle school
curriculum.
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