Video

The Impact of Multimedia Educative Curriculum Materials (MECMs) on Teachers' Beliefs about Scientific Argumentation

Recent reform efforts in science education include a focus on science practices. Teachers require support in integrating these practices into instruction. Multimedia educative curriculum materials (MECMs), digital materials explicitly designed to support teacher learning, offer one potential resource for this critical need. Consequently, the authors investigated how teachers used MECMs and whether that use impacted their beliefs about the practice of scientific argumentation. They conducted a randomised experimental study with 90 middle school science teachers in the USA.

Author/Presenter

Suzanna Loper

Katherine L. McNeill

María González-Howard

Lisa M. Marco-Bujosa

Laura M. O’Dwyer

Year
2019
Short Description

Authors discuss how teachers used MECMs and whether that use impacted their beliefs about the practice of scientific argumentation.

How Viewers Orient Toward Student Dialogue in Online Math Videos

Online math videos for student learning are abundant; yet they are surprisingly uniform in their monologic, expository mode of presentation and their emphasis on procedural skill. In response, we created an alternative model of online math videos that feature the unscripted dialogue of secondary school students, who convey sources of confusion and resolve the dilemmas that arise during problem solving.

Author/Presenter

Joanne Lobato

Carren Walker

Lead Organization(s)
Year
2019
Short Description

Authors describe an alternative model of online math videos that feature unscripted dialogue of secondary school students, who convey sources of confusion and resolve the dilemmas that arise during problem solving.

Using a Video Club Design to Promote Teacher Attention to Students' Ideas in Science

Science education stakeholders worldwide are engaged in efforts to support teachers' noticing and making sense of students' thinking in science. Here we introduce the design of a science teaching video club and present a study of its implementation. The current design extends prior research on video clubs as a form of professional development for supporting mathematics teachers. Results indicate that the current design supported science teachers in noticing and discussing students' thinking in sustained and meaningful ways.

Author/Presenter

Melissa J. Luna

Miriam Gamoran Sherin

Lead Organization(s)
Year
2017
Short Description

In this article, authors introduce the design of a science teaching video club and present a study of its implementation.

Examining the Impact of Lesson-Analysis Based Teacher Education and Professional Development across Methods Courses, Student Teaching, and Induction

Author/Presenter

Christopher Wilson

Molly Stuhlsatz

Connie Hvidsten

Betty Stennett

Lead Organization(s)
Year
2017
Short Description

Presentation on ViSTA at the 2017 NARST conference in San Antonio, Texas. The ViSTA Plus project is a multi-year preservice teacher education program for elementary teachers that spans the methods course, student teaching, and the first year of teaching.

Resource(s)

2016 Video Showcase: Advancing STEM Learning for All

Event Date
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On May 17th – 23rd, 2016, more than 150 projects will showcase three-minute videos of their innovative work broadening participation and access to STEM. We invite researchers, practitioners, administrators, policy makers and the general public to view the videos and to interact with each of the presenters online. We look forward to your participation!

http://stemforall2016.videohall.com/

Discipline/Topic
Event Type

The Question of Dissemination: Using Video to Draw Broader Audiences to NSF Research

STEM Categorization
Day
Thu

Consider the role project videos can play in dissemination of research with OSPrI describing their video experience, and NSF situating the work within their efforts to improve policymakers’ understanding of DR K–12 research and development.

Date/Time
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Session Materials

A challenge for researchers and federal research funding institutions in the 21st century is how to get the word out on how research is pertinent and being used in by the field. According to Neild (2016, p1):

Session Types

Mathematics for All: Facilitator

Access Mathematics for All: Participant at http://www.corwin.com/books/Book233325

Author/Presenter

Babette Moeller

Barbara Dubitsky

Marvin Cohen

Karen Marschke-Tobier

Hal Melnick

Linda Metnetsky

Andrea Brothman

Randi Cecchine

Year
2012
Short Description

Developed by Bank Street College of Education and the Education Development Center, this comprehensive professional development resource contains all the materials you need to conduct workshops that will show general and special education teachers how to collaborate to provide a high-quality, standards-based mathematics education to all students, including those with disabilities. The materials will deepen the understanding of both the facilitators and of the participants in these workshops. This resource will enable schools and school districts to increase the expertise of their math and special education leaders and provide their own workshops for teachers rather than hire outside consultants to do so.

The Math for All learning experiences detailed in the enclosed books and DVDs help teachers
•Assess students' strengths and needs
•Use multiple instructional strategies to teach specific math concepts
•Tailor lessons based on individual students' strengths and needs to help them achieve high-quality learning outcomes in mathematics

The authors emphasize how the neurodevelopmental demands of a math lesson interact with individual students' strengths and needs. They also provide step-by-step guidance for adapting materials, activities, and instructional strategies to make lessons accessible to all students.

This comprehensive resource includes two DVDs: one with PowerPoint presentations and embedded classroom videos, and a second DVD with just the video portion that shows examples of how teachers in Grades 3-5 have made math lessons accessible to students—including those with physical, learning, and language challenges. Also enclosed is the Math for All Participant Book, which includes the corresponding handouts and reproducibles for the program.