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This is a short guide to help you design your astronomy education activity and prepare to submit it to astroEDU (based on Strubbe, 2012).
Education research indicates that effective activities should be "backwards-designed." That means, instead of first coming up with what the teacher and students will do, and then deciding what the goals of the activity are, you'll write a more effective activity if you do things in the other order: first design your goals, learning objectives, and evaluation plan, and then design your activity to support these goals. Here's the idea in more detail:
There are three distinct types of goals to consider: scientific content, scientific practices, and scientific attitudes. Consider your audience and what their background is, and how you would like your learners' understanding, abilities and thinking to change as a result of the activity.
Scientific content: What do we want students to know or understand?
e.g., "The Moon appears to go through phases because of how much of the Moon's illuminated face we see from Earth as the Moon orbits around us each month."
Consider choosing:
Scientific practices
What do you want your students to be able to do, how do you want to affect their thinking, and what skills do you want them to develop? These aspects are important in helping all students think scientifically about the world, whether or not they pursue careers in science. A framework for enumerating scientific practices (from the U.S.’s Next Generation Science Standards; NRC 2012) is:
Scientific attitudes:
Educational activities can affect how students (and perhaps even their teachers) feel about science and education: Example goals: Students feel...
Inquiry-based learning is a powerful means for students to learn both scientific content and scientific reasoning together. Essential parts of inquiry are students learning science in ways that mirror authentic scientific research practices, developing explanations, and having ownership over the path of their learning. We encourage you to consider ways to incorporate inquiry into your activity, and have prepared some additional information about inquiry-based learning.
If you have suggestions of other resources we should include, please send us an email!