Annual Meeting Posters

Submitter's Name Title Abstract Poster Authors Poster File
Jones, Jamaica 10 Years of Online, Earth System Education through DLESE

For the last decade, the Digital Library for Earth System Education (DLESE) has been operated by the University Corporation for Atmospheric Research (UCAR).  DLESE is a free library service providing access to over 10,000 high quality, web-based Earth System educational resources.  First developed, with generous funding from the Geoscience Directorate of the National Science Foundation (NSF), by UCAR’s Digital Learning Sciences and now managed by the NCAR Library, DLESE has for 10 years served as a large, geoscience education community undertaking involving scientists, educators, and library buildersacross the nation. 

The goal of this grassroots, community-led project is to provide searchable access to high-quality, online educational resources for K-12 and undergraduate Earth System science education.  These goals were met with the development and operation of the library’s core technical infrastructure; the maintenance of collections; provision of user support in educational settings; and the guarantee of program continuity across distributed technology and collection building efforts.  In addition to these services, DLESE also offers educators six content-specific “Teaching Boxes;” collections of interrelated learning concepts, digital resources, and cohesive narration that bridge the gap between discrete resources and understanding.  Created, tested, and evaluated by teachers themselves, the activities in each Teaching Box are aligned to National and California State standards. 

In the coming months, DLESE will be enhanced with additional Teaching Boxes and an updated approach to the delivery of online, Earth Systems educational resources.  In this poster, we will introduce and reorient educators to the value of DLESE resources while also looking forward to new collaborations and developments.  

 

Jamaica Jones
Salisbury, Lutishoor A bibliometric survey of the literature relating to NSDL: preliminary results

The poster will identify the universe of publications emanating from the NSDL projects, services that are published in the scholarly literature, in conference proceedings and those presented at national conferences.  It will identify the authors writing on NSDL, the journals that publish these papers, and the conferences where most of the papers are presented.  It will also show impact of the literature, citation patterns and the extent of collaboration.

Lutishoor Salisbury, Jeremy Smith and Brady Cress Chemistry and Biochemistry Library University of Arkansas Libraries Fayetteville, AR
Rosenberg, Joel A Tour of the SMILE Pathway

We've finished most of the development work on the SMILE (Science and Math Informal Learning Educators) Pathway, <www.howtosmile.org>, and we launched it on Halloween! Come learn about our schema's features, including how we've incorporated accessibility, diversity, and geographical information. See the community tools we've included, including commenting and rating on individual activities, and the ability to create annotated lists of activities. Get a feel for the overall approach we've taken to make our site as useful as possible for informal educators.

Joel Rosenberg, Darrell Porcello, Sherry Hsi
Rothberg, Madeleine Access for All: NSDL Accessibility Portal

The WGBH National Center for Accessible Media (NCAM) and WGBH Interactive are building a portal to provide personalized accessibility information for NSDL. The portal will launch with metadata from project partners Teachers’ Domain, The Science and Math Informal Learning Educators Pathway (SMILE), and the Middle School Portal 2: Math & Science Pathways (MSP2). All NSDL collections are welcome to join in.

The project will use the NSDL Collection System to store Access For All metadata in the NSDL Data Repository. We will build a portal with the Digital Discovery System tools to provide a customized user interface offering user profiles that make it easier to find accessible resources for students or teachers with disabilities. The poster session (and our computer lab session on Wednesday) offer a chance to meet project staff and find out how you can get involved.

Madeleine Rothberg and Peter Pinch
Molina, Francis Addressing Educational Impact: Determining the Content Alignment and Instructional Quality of NSDL Resources

One of the purposes of the NSDL is to help educators implement standards-based reforms by providing high-quality materials for students and teachers at all levels (Wattenberg, 1998; Zia, 2001). NSDL Pathways are considered an important vehicle for making the digital library more useful because they connect professional society members and other existing users to the broader resources of the library (Howe, 2007). However, available resources have not necessarily been assigned to K-12 content standards and, for Pathways that do assign their resources to standards, there is considerable variability in the methods used to make decisions about alignment to standards. Furthermore, the mere presence of specific content in a resource--even if it is aligned to a content standard--does not ensure that the resource provides support for student learning of that content. Instructional quality judgments that are made by applying research-based criteria are currently not part of the cataloguing process in NSDL Pathways. Such criteria include whether the resources provide a variety of phenomena and representations to make abstract ideas plausible and intelligible (Kesidou & Roseman, 2002). They are important because they have been shown to positively predict student learning (Roth et al., 2009).

The lack of information about instructional quality in addition to content alignment makes it difficult for users to efficiently locate NSDL resources that are likely to promote student learning of standards. Supporting Pathways and collections developers in systematically analyzing resources for their alignment to learning goals and their instructional quality can help. We are on the first year of our NSDL project to work with the Pathways, the Resource Center, and Technical Network Services to build capacity for determining the content alignment and instructional quality of K-12 resources.

Francis Molina, Jo Ellen Roseman, Ted Willard, and Karon Kelly
Bower, Rachael AMSER: The Applied Math and Science Education Repository

AMSER - the Applied Math and Science Education Repository - is an NSDL Pathways project consisting of a portal (http://amser.org) of educational resources and services built specifically for use by those in community and technical colleges but free for anyone to use. AMSER  is being created by a team of project partners led by Internet Scout and provides access to high quality applied STEM resources and tools that support finding, organizing and sharing information about these resources including an online foldering system, saved search capabilities and customizable email bulletins.  Covering 350 applied STEM topics, AMSER uses three different subject vocabularies to describe resources - Library of Congress Classification (LCC), Gateway to Educational Materials (GEM) and AMSER's homegrown Key Concept vocabulary. The project produces two different online publications: the AMSER Quarterly provides information about project partners, new collections and resources, and upcoming events; the AMSER Science Reader Monthly links an applied STEM article from a popular journal with contextual resources from the AMSER collection.

Rachael Bower and Edward Almasy
Saldivar, Manuel Gerardo An Overview of the Curriculum Customization Service

The Curriculum Customization Service (CCS) is a Web-based system built using NSDL’s EduPak tools. CCS delivers digitized, publisher-provided curricular materials - student textbook chapters, assessments, instructional support materials - along with interactive digital library resources and instructor-developed resources in the context of learning goals. Materials are cataloged and managed using the NSDL Collection System, and instructor-contributed content is saved to and retrieved from the Digital Discovery System (DDS). Web service APIs are used to generate rich user interfaces in the CCS. In addition, DDS services are being used to integrate digital resources from DLESE, linked to district learning goals.

The current field trial involves all 120 middle and high school Earth science educators in a large urban school district using the system for planning and delivery of differentiated instruction, a concept at the heart of the CCS system's design. Differentiated instruction is an approach to teaching and learning that seeks to customize curriculum to the needs of different populations of students, versus the traditional 'one size fits all' approach. We report on data collected thus far and plans for ongoing evaluation of teacher practice, beliefs, and attitudes about differentiated instruction and teaching with technology.

Tamara Sumner, Holly Devaul, Manuel Gerardo Saldivar, Lynne Davis, John Weatherly
Kazilek, Charles Ask A Biologist Extreme Web Makeover 2.0

We are in the process of moving a long-running and large website (askabiologist.asu.edu) from a static HTML format to a new dynamic Drupal interface. As part of the project META data is being added for inclusion into NSDL as well as additional tools for collaborative content development and a language translation workflow. Working with librarians and educators the new site is building on existing Drupal modules as well as adding some custom tools for datasets. The completed Web makeover will allow existing volunteers to contribute beyond Q&A participation and allow them to be an active part of content creation and review.

Charles Kazilek, Margaret Coulombe, Molina Walters, and Jacob Sahertian
Ahmed, Syed Toufeeq Bridging the Digital Accessibility Gap through MAISON Services

MAISON is implemented as a middleware service to help minimize the extraneous load on users who are blind, while they search and access to materials from the large and diverse collection of resources available on NSDL. MAISON establishes as precisely as possible, the information needed, based on the current search context and user preferences. The MAISON middleware provides a new CSIP-A protocol that enables development of user interfaces that can deliver contextually informed strand map navigation. The adaptation strategies currently implemented include strand map reduction, upcoming key concepts preview, and summary preview. The ongoing extensions to the MAISON middleware include document, web page, and web site preview APIs for improved access to external digital resources linked to the underlying information space.

Syed Toufeeq Ahmed, K. Selcuk Candan, Mijung Kim, Shruti Gaur, Renwei Yu, Xinxin Wang, Suganthi Cidambaram, Wei Huang, Jong Kim, Hari Sundaram, Hasan Davulcu, and Terri Hedgpeth
Ambos, Elizabeth Building Locally - Linking Globally : Networking Micro-Communities of New Science and Math Teachers Using the NSDL to Advance Instructional Excellence in High Need Schools (DUE 0735011)
The 23-campus California State University (CSU) system—the largest public university system in the U.S.—educates the majority of California’s teachers, and currently operates a number of NSF-funded Robert Noyce Scholars programs.  CSU’s highly qualified mathematics and science pre-service teachers often come from communities with high needs schools, and many return to similar schools upon obtaining their teaching credentials.  To support these mathematics and science teachers, the California State University (CSU) has created a linked series of websites associated with individual CSU Noyce projects which function as virtual communities for Noyce scholars (the “building locally” concept).  These online communities connect the scholars to the electronic resources and tools provided by the NSDL and MERLOT, the Multimedia Educational Resource for Learning and Online Teaching (the “link globally” concept).  Originated by MERLOT, the Noyce Scholars’ website is designed to be a true “teaching commons”: a forum within which teachers can comment upon and recommend NSDL and other resources, and share exemplary practices and lesson plans relating to those resources, particularly those that work in challenging classroom management situations.  Over the past two years, more than 200 Noyce Scholars and their faculty mentors have participated in professional development events to gain awareness of NSDL resources and their use in high needs classrooms, and have joined the MERLOT teaching commons.  Many of these Scholars are now embarking on careers as high school and middle school teachers, are using NSDL resources successfully in their classrooms, and are mentoring other teachers on the use of these resources.  

 

Elizabeth Ambos, California State University (CSU) Office of the Chancellor, Long Beach, California; David Andrews and Jaime Arvizu, CSU Fresno; Laura Henriques, CSU Long Beach; Gerry Hanley and Joan Bissell, CSU Office of the Chancellor; Robert Desharnais and Paul Narguizian, CSU Los Angeles; John Ittelson and George Station, CSU Monterey Bay; Davida Fischman, CSU San Bernardino; Jodye Selco, CSU Pomona; Ron Hughes, CSU Bakersfield
Belford, Robert Chem Ed DL WikiHyperGlossary

This poster will describe the software architecture and program development aspects of the Chemical Education Digital Library Wikihyperglossary. This program automates the markup of digital text documents and web pages in a way which connects them to the multimedia resources of ChemEd DL. The initial work was done in PHP/MySQL, but moved to Perl using the Catalyst framework and MySQL database due to text processing requirements for which Perl is better suited. The main components of the system are divided into three main controllers.

  1. Hyperglossary controller parses text documents and returns them marked up. In order to instantly return the document this process is done incrementally so the submitting browser never appears to wait for the document to be returned.
  2. Content controller provides wiki-like functionality.
  3. Administrative controller creates glossaries and defines user permissions.

Web scripts have been developed that can be accessed using a RESTful (Representational State Transfer) API (Application Program Interface) that returns content located at the ChemEd DL. The overall system is designed to be the epitome of a Web 2.0 application which is user-centric, has interoperability, and facilitates collaboration over the Web.

Michael A. Bauer, Robert E. Belford, Daniel Berleant, Ismail G. Yuce, John L. Holmes and John W. Moore
Holmes, Jon Chemical Education Digital Library (ChemEd DL)

The Chemical Education Digital Library (ChemEd DL, www.chemeddl.org), a Pathways project of National Science Distributed Learning (NSDL nsdl.org), aims to provide an online library environment devoted to the teaching and learning of chemistry. In addition to providing information about chemistry education resources and tools to discover those resources, ChemEd DL provides social networking tools to foster community development, content management tools to organize the content of the library, and course management tools to deliver the content and assess learning in a educational setting. ChemEd DL intends to communicate chemistry in an engaging manner that provokes curiosity and excitement while at the same time providing accurate and current chemical information. ChemEd DL Textbook Tables of Contents links library content with publishers textbooks in a manner accessible to even novice learners of chemistry. Connecting the world's largest scientific professional organization, the American Chemical Society (ACS, acs.org), the world's premiere peer-reviewed Journal of Chemical Education (JCE,www.jce.divched.org), and the innovative tools of The ChemCollective (www.chemcollective.org), with NSDL and its multidisciplinary Pathways, ChemEd DL provides its patrons a world-class digital library intent on teaching chemistry to the world.

Jon L. Holmes, John W. Moore, Mary Kirchhoff, David Yaron
Moore, John ChemPaths: Learning to Meander – An Online Portal to ChemEd DL Resources for Intrinsically Linked Learning

An immense number of resources is available online for teaching chemistry and many efforts have gone into incorporating them into textbooks as addendums or into courses as tutorials. As part of the National Science Digital Library (NSDL), the ChemEd DL has begun to catalogue resources and create portals accessible by students and teachers alike. The goal of ChemPaths is to be an online student resource portal that brings text, video, interactive applets, and tutorials together into one cohesive presentation—an online equivalent of a textbook in a traditional course. Beyond putting text and graphics onto the web, ChemPaths intrinsically links textbook sections to other textbook sections and to other tutorial pages dealing with similar topics. The portal allows for easy access for instructors to edit existing material and create their own tutorials. The site is currently in use and its efficacy is being evaluated during the fall semester, 2009.

ChemPaths is being used in lieu of a traditional textbook in one of three sections of a one-semester general chemistry course. To evaluate the effectiveness of ChemPaths as a replacement for the traditional textbook, pre- and post-tests are being used involving both quantitative and qualitative questions on the topics Thermo-chemistry and Chemical Equilibrium. Evaluation will be based on student learning of fundamental quantitative skills as well as conceptual understanding of the topics covered. It is hoped that the research will answer fundamental questions about students’ abilities to learn from online material.

 

Justin M. Shorb; John W. Moore
Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness Network (CLEAN) Pathway

The Climate Literacy and Energy Awareness Network (CLEAN) Pathway will build on the efforts of the Climate Literacy Network (http://www.climateliteracynow.org) and the establishment of the Climate Literacy: Essential Principles of Climate Science  (http://www.climatescience.gov) to steward a broad collection of educational resources that facilitate students, teachers, and citizens becoming climate literate and informed about “the climate’s influence on you and society and your influence on climate.”  The focus of our efforts will be to integrate the effective use of the resources across all educational levels – with a particular focus on the middle-school through undergraduate levels (grades 6-16) as well as to citizens through formal and informal education venues and communities.   The activities of the CLEAN Pathway project will have three major components.

CLEAN Collection-  Through the identification and stewardship of existing high-quality digital resources, a collection of educational resources will be built that address climate literacy and energy awareness culled from the wide range of collections of such resources that are available. These resources will be selected as they support Climate Literacy.  They will be aligned with a) the AAAS Project 2061 Benchmarks for Science Literacy; b) the National Science Education Standards; c) the NAAEE Excellence in Environmental Education Guidelines for Learning; and d) the latest science as published in the IPCC, CCSP and other climate assessment reports.

CLEAN Strand Map- The CLEAN collection will utilize the leading NSDL browse tool, the NSDL science literacy maps.  Building on existing work to help teachers connect concepts, standards, and NSDL educational resources by providing a way to discover how scientific concepts relate to one another, the CLEAN Pathway work will significantly improve educators’ access to both educationally and scientifically sound resources relating to climate and energy topics. NSDL Science Literacy Maps serve teachers and students in finding resources that relate to specific science, technology and math concepts. The maps illustrate connections between concepts and depict how concepts build upon one another across grade levels.

CLEAN Community- The project will facilitate of the effective use of the resources with the teachers, students, and citizens.  This will involve a range of activities including: A)Teleconference-online workshops that help teachers and citizens learn to use various resources in the collection and help teachers integrate them into their classrooms.  B) The facilitation of an online community using Web 2.0 social networking tools to promote collaboration, interactivity, and knowledge sharing among its users. C) Facilitate and expand the existing Climate Literacy Network to include existing and emerging climate and energy education experts and enthusiasts.

The CLEAN Pathway project officially begins in January 2010.

 

Tamara Shapiro Ledley, Mark McCaffrey, Frank Niepold, Susan Buhr, Cynthia Howell, Cathryn Manduca, Sean Fox
Mason, Bruce ComPADRE Updates

This poster will highlight recent efforts on the ComPADRE Pathway for Physics and Astronomy Education. Highlights include collaborations with the Open Source Physics project and the Physics Education Research community, the development of new collections for introductory college physics courses and relativity, and the creation of a web resource for Careers in Physics.

ComPADRE Editors, Collaborators, and Staff
Jacobs, Patricia Computational Science Education Reference Desk (CSERD)

CSERD represents a national partnership to evaluate, modify, collect, tag, and (where rights can be obtained) archive the best computational model based materials; to provide mechanisms for NSDL users, content creators, and collection maintainers to add to and annotate the collection; to provide an outlet for peer reviewed publication for content creators; to provide training and technical assistance to collection maintainers; and to provide an infrastructure for educators to bind disparate learning objects into functional units tied to state and national standards. The hallmark of our effort is the rigorous Verification, Validation, and Accreditation review and the Journal of Computational Science Education (JOCSE).  JOCSE  promotes the use of computation in education through disseminating unique uses of computation in the classroom as well as research findings in computational science education, with submissions from both professionals and students. JOCSE utilizes internet technology and a web-based format to allow for enhanced interactivity in all publications.

Robert M. Panoff, Patricia Jacobs
Golder, Diny Conceptual Discovery of Educational Resources through Learning Objectives

This poster reports on current work with the NSF-funded Achievement Standards Network (ASN) to support discovery of educational resources in digital libraries using conceptual graphs of officially promulgated achievement standards statements. Conceptual graphs or knowledge maps of achievement standards reveal the macrostructure of the learning domain modeled by those standards and support higher-level understanding by teachers and students. The work builds on the conceptual framework of the AAAS knowledge maps by providing the means to flexibly define and deploy new relationship schemas to fit the disparate modeling needs of the nearly 740 learning standards documents in the ASN repository. Using an RDF-based, node-link representation of learning goals and the relationships among them, the ASN Knowledge Map Service will provide the framework to correlate educational resources to nodes in conceptual models in order to augment more conventional mechanisms of discovery and retrieval in digital libraries.

Diny Golder Stuart Sutton
McLean, Lois Content Clips Update

Content Clips is a free online service for organizing and presenting multimedia resources from distributed digital libraries (http://www.contentclips.com).  The system framework supports varied media formats, and the dynamic visual interface works well for electronic whiteboard presentations.  Registered users can find resources in the public Clips Collection, incorporate clips from other sites, and create their own personal sets and activities.  This poster will highlight plans for a new NSDL project (NSF DUE-0938120) that will support Content Clips improvements, including interface updates, automated activity feedback, a book-builder template, teacher-selected sets of multimedia clips, online training aids, and further integration as an NSDL selection, customization, and presentation service.  The poster will also show how system elements are being used to build the STEM Stories web site at http://www.stemstories.org (McLean Media, NSF HRD-073400) and to create resources for the Beyond Penguins and Polar Bears ezine for elementary teachers (http://beyondpenguins.nsdl.org, The Ohio State University).

Lois McLean, Ed.D. Rick Tessman
Wilson, Courtney Crossing Boundaries: Integrating Emerging Technologies into Biodiversity Studies by Secondary Students

Crossing Boundaries, funded through NSF’s Innovative Technology Experiences for Students and Teachers (ITEST) program, is interested in collaborating with NSDL projects that are developing tools or resources relevant to ecological studies by middle and high school students. Crossing Boundaries enables science teachers to teach in new ways, using emerging technologies to engage their students in exploration of biodiversity conservation issues both locally and abroad. For example, Crossing Boundaries students pose questions about biodiversity and address these questions using Science Pipes. With this NSDL-funded workflow tool, students can readily select relevant components of massive biodiversity datasets and create visualizations for analysis and communication of the results. Crossing Boundaries also helps teachers to use GIS, GPS, Google Earth, wikis, podcasts, and blogs in their science teaching. If you are developing technological tools or digital resources of potential use in ecological investigations, we welcome discussion about potential collaboration.

Jim MaKinster, Hobart and William Smith Colleges Nancy Trautmann, Cornell Lab of Ornithology Eugenio Arima, Hobart and William Smith Colleges Courtney Wilson, Cornell Lab of Ornithology
Donovan, Sam Cyberlearning at Community Colleges (C3): Faculty Scholarship, E-science, and Open Curriculum The emerging emphasis on cyberlearning – a comprehensive view of how networked computing and communications tools mediate learning – challenges many of our existing notions of teaching and learning. The "Cyberlearning at Community Colleges (C3): Faculty Scholarship, E-science, and Open Curriculum" project provides structured professional development opportunities that engage undergraduate biology faculty in exploring 21st Century teaching practices. Twelve face-to-face workshops emphasizing collaborative curriculum development will supplement project-based online group work for faculty teaching introductory biology, microbiology, and anatomy & physiology. Professional development activities will be built around the effective use of existing and publicly accessible digital library materials, networked computing and communications technologies, and E-science resources. The C3 Project Digital Library Partnerships include NSDL, MicrobLibrary, BEN, APS Archive, OERCommons, AMSER, and BioQUEST. Workshops will be held in conjunction with our Scientific and Teaching Society Partners (ASMCUE, HAPS, NABT, BioQUEST, and BSA) to help faculty integrate with existing professional communities and develop outlets for their scholarship. Sam Donovan, University of Pittsburgh [sdonovan@pitt.edu] John R. Jungck, Beloit College [jungck@beloit.edu] Kristin Jenkins, Beloit College [kjenkins@nescent.org] Ethel Stanley, Beloit College [stanleye@beloit.edu]
Mardis, Marcia Digital Libraries to School Libraries (DL2SL): School librarians as users and promoters of NSDL resources

A new project, DL2SL, examines a possible solution to issues of access, skill, policy, and motivation that frustrate school librarians' efforts to help to bring NSDL resources to K-12 learning environments. DL2SL includes a 3 phase approach: a survey of perceptions; the deployment of a MARC-based metadata distribution tool; and targeted professional development. This poster will illustrate the project plan and report the work to-date. The project is an outgrowth of culiminated results of 4 NSDL projects since 1999 (TeacherLIB, Viewing the Future, Infusing NSDL into Middle Schools, and DLConnect) that show that school library media specialists not only have a strong desire to promote NSDL resources, they also have the expertise to support the use of NSDL resources in schools.

Marcia A. Mardis
Riem, Jennifer EcoEd Digital Library: Advancing Undergraduate Ecology Education

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EcoEd Digital Library (www.ecoed.net) is ESA's online catalog of resources for teaching undergraduate ecology.  EcoEd DL provides instructors with teaching resources that are peer-reviewed for quality, scientific accuracy, and pedagogical use. Peer review began in 2007 and the library currently accepts photographs, figures, tables, classroom activities, and videos for review. The user community spans a wide range of teaching environments with approximately 40% of its users being from universities, 13% from 4-year colleges, 3% from 2-year colleges, 3% from community colleges, 14% from high schools, and 2% from middle schools. The year between February 2008 and 2009 saw 30% growth, with the number resources increasing from 250 to 329 individual items and the user community expanding from 2300 to over 3000 registered users. The long term goal for the library is to facilitate an active community of users and contributors and showcase a variety of high-quality resources that incorporate cutting edge science. Toward this end, researchers are encouraged to adapt and submit research products in order to meet Broader Impacts requirements for NSF sponsored research. As part of the BioScience Education Network (BEN), sponsored by AAAS, EcoEd DL gives its authors an opportunity to reach beyond just ecology and exchange teaching resources with the broader life sciences education community.

Jennifer Riem, Ecological Society of America Teresa Mourad, Ecological Society of America Kenneth Klemow, Wilkes University David Kirschtel, CUAHSI (Consortium of Universities for the Advancement of Hydrologic Science, Inc.)
Hsi, Sherry Educational Data Mining Approaches for Digital Libraries

This collaborative research project between the Exploratorium and Utah State's Department of Instructional Technology and Learning Sciences investigates online evaluation approaches and the application of educational data mining to educational digital libraries and services. Much work over the past decades has focused on developing algorithms and methods for discovering patterns in large datasets, known as Knowledge Discovery from Data (KDD). Webmetrics, the application of KDD to web usage mining, is growing rapidly in areas such as e-commerce. Educational Data Mining (EDM) is just beginning to emerge as a tool to analyze the massive, longitudinal user data that are captured in online learning environments and educational digital libraries.

This project uses EDM to examine data from the Exploratorium's Learning Resources Collection and the Instructional Architect at Utah State University. The results are combined with more traditional evaluation data (e.g., surveys, interviews) as part of a comprehensive strategy to understand science teachers' behaviors, motivations, and learning experiences with digital library resources. The project informs improvements in the design of the user experience, as well as tailored teacher professional development, contributing to a growing body of research on teacher learning by using cyber-enabled approaches. This poster shares the results from the first year's work.

Mimi Recker, Sherry Hsi, Beijie Xu, Rob Rothfarb
Mackinney, Paul Engineering Pathway: The Computing & Engineering Education Wing of NSDL

The education of our future engineering workforce has never been more critical than it is today — as engineers are essential to harness the spirit of innovation to create solutions to the worldwide challenges facing people and our planet. Serving as the engineering education wing of the NSDL, the Engineering Pathway (EP) recently redesigned its website to better engage the next generation by incorporating findings and recommendations from the recent National Academy of Engineeering study, Changing the Conversation. Its new Engineering Pathway logo connotes movement and adventure paths that provide opportunities to learn, connect, create, dream, design and do. The tagline messages encourage the use of EP resources to “shape the future and turn ideas into reality.” And new images, representing numerous library resources, picture diverse people engaged in myriad engineering activities. Engineering Pathway is proud to introduce its redesign in support of a more public-friendly engineering education message.

To support learning for broad and diverse communities, with audiences from elementary school through lifelong learners, the K-Gray Engineering Pathway provides a “one stop shopping” portal of comprehensive engineering education resources within the greater NSDL. The EP digital library provides customized pedagogical engineering information and resources for various audiences and activities. EP features include:

  • Targeted grade-level engineering curriculum searches tailored for K-12 teachers
  • Aggregation of the most significant K-12 engineering learning resources in one place
  • Through TeachEngineering, access to state-to-state educational content standards alignment for K-12 curricular resources
  • Resources for teachers, counselors, parents and students to learn about becoming an engineer
  • Disciplinary communiy pages for all undergraduate and graduate ABET-acredited computing and engineering disciplines
  •  Information on ABET accreditation criteria and exemplars
  • Best practices for teaching engineering courses in higher education
  • Resources and learning tools for engineering college students
  • Information and resources on diversifying the engineering profession
  • Seamless access for NSDL users through community single sign-on
  • Premier Award for excellence in engineering education courseware
  • Premier Curriculum Award for K-12 engineering
  • Daily events feed on engineering innovations for every day of the year
  • Engineering education “Today in History” blog with highlights to EP resources
  • Annotated textbooks with links to student and faculty educational resources in Engineering
  • Other value-added services to support our business model

Stop by our exhibit booth to learn more, or visit EngineeringPathway.org

Kimiko Ryokai, Alice Agogino, Lora Oehlberg, Paul MacKinney
Molina, Francis Enhancing the NSDL Strand Map Service: Feedback from the Community

Project 2061 developed the Atlas of Science Literacy (American Association for the Advancement of Science [AAAS], 2001, 2007) as part of a coordinated set of tools to help educators understand and use specific goals for student learning. Based on Atlas, the National Science Foundation's National Science Digital Library (NSDL) program has provided funding to develop the online Science Literacy Maps (http://strandmaps.nsdl.org) to serve as a browsing interface for educational resources, and the accompanying Strand Map Service (SMS) that allows developers to integrate the maps into other applications. Preliminary studies indicate that the digital maps may promote purposeful discovery of online resources by engaging educators with the learning goals presented by the interface (Butcher, Bhushan, & Sumner, 2006; Richardson, Matthews, & Thompson, 2008).

To enhance its educational impact, we plan to extend the functionality of SMS to serve as a platform for collaboration and communication among educators through a user-centered, iterative design process. We are soliciting input from classroom teachers, curriculum coordinators, and the NSDL community to inform the development roadmap for the SMS. We will present some possibilities that are being considered, including: (1) a zoom in/out function, (2) having map versions whose topology are identical to the print version, (3) a visual indication that resources are available for a given benchmark without any need for further user action, (4) an additional tab in the information bubble showing the content standard from the user’s state that corresponds with the currently selected benchmark, (5) an additional tab that lets users add benchmark-specific notes to the information bubble; (6) a threaded discussion that lets teachers give feedback and share experiences with use of resources associated with a given benchmark; and (7) brief tutorials for pathways leaders to use in training catalogers/editors.

Francis Molina, Ted Willard, Brian Sweeney, Tamara Sumner, Mike Wright, and John Weatherley
Akbar, Monika ENSEMBLE: Supporting the full range of computing education communities

 

The alpha launch of the Ensemble Pathway demonstrates a diverse range of collections of educational resources, fundamental services for general users, and demonstrations of enhanced prototypes of advanced tools and supplemental knowledge resources. Partner communities and technologies are coming together so alpha testers' participatory design suggestions can help us integrate and simplify usage scenarios and distributed portal interfaces.

 

Monika Akbar, Peter Brusilovsky, Lillian Cassel, Steve Carpenter, Yinlin Chen, Lois Delcambre, Steve Edwards, Weiguo Fan, Edward Fox, Richard Furuta, Dan Garcia, Greg Hislop, Maggie Johnson, David Maier, Manuel Perez-Quinones, Steve Seidman, Frank Shipman, Chris Stephenson, Heikki Topi, Bryant York
Mackinney, Paul Expanding the Accessibility of NSDL for Mobile Learning

Educational digital libraries are becoming mainstream tools for learning and research for science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STE&M) education at all levels. Although in classroom settings, the Internet and WWW are being used more and more frequently for classroom learning, there are new opportunities for digital libraries in structured out-of-classroom inquiry-based and project-based learning activities as well as for informal learning activities in homes, museums, and after school clubs. There are also opportunities for learning while students are commuting, jogging, or in other noneducational settings.  Educators now have the opportunity to use mobile technologies for embedded use in the classroom and beyond. Documented new pedagogical applications include conversational learning, inquiry-based learning, assessment, authentic learning, computer scaffolding and lifelong learning.   We present ongoing research on mobile access to digital library resources, and mobile interfaces to contextually relevant digital library resources.

Kimiko Ryokai, Alice Agogino, Lora Oehlberg, Paul MacKinney
Diekema, Anne Exposing educational resources in the NSDL and its Pathways

The current organization of NSDL resources appears to be mostly system-centered resulting in a digital library that is cumbersome to use for teachers as well as students. A careful review of NSDL and pathway user interfaces indicates that the majority of these interfaces do not take into account what is known about educational users and the context of their information seeking behavior. For example, teachers have limited time to search for resources to incorporate in their teaching and are reulctant to wade through long lists of results that are only partially relevant. Time constraints also demand clear overviews of what resource topics can be found in individual collections since teachers have no time to find this out through trial and error. Additionally, teachers are working within their institutional contexts that require the use of educational standards. As a result teachers are constrained in what they can teach and what they want to see in their results lists.

McIlvain, Eileen Got Metrics? - The NSDL Metrics Matrix

The NSDL Metrics Working Group has been developing a set of recommendations to the NSDL community, centered on best practices for metrics gathering and analysis over multiple aspects of a project's activities and lifecycle. The group was tasked in January 2009 with 1) helping individual projects improve their understanding, collection, and analysis of metrics data, first starting with web metrics data, and 2) finding common metrics that could be used across all NSDL projects so that interested parties can look at the whole of NSDL. The over-arching goal is to provide best practices and guidelines for measuring impact for individual projects and the entire NSDL. The working group has come up with a matrix that correlates activities, data that can be collected, and possible impacts that can measured directly or inferred from the data. As a tool, the matrix provides multiple ways to help project staff uncover data they are missing or overlooking and help demonstrate audience and project impact.

Kim Lightle Sherry Hsi Ed Almasy Lyle Barbato Cathy Lowe Yolanda George Paul MacKinney Sharon Clark Eileen McIlvain
Ho, Shuyuan IntegraL: Building NSDL Community Infrastructure

Libraries have large collections of online resources both locally and through subscriptions. We describe an approach for automatically linking related information and services throughout and across these online repositories. This “lightweight” integration approach is called IntLib (Integrating Library Collections and Services). IntLib also includes federated search across all repositories. Most libraries should be able to implement IntLib with some technical assistance.

With IntLib’s “virtual integration”, users interact with their library system just as before. But in addition, they see extra link anchors. Upon selecting one, IntLib automatically generates a list of links to relevant documents, services and metadata.

In our lecture we will demonstrate IntLib, explain how it works at a high-level, and describe how libraries can use IntLib to integrate their collections and services. We hope that an IntLib community will result from this and similar presentations.

Library users face several key impediments to completing tasks because library resources are not integrated adequately. Users often need to know which resources exist and relate to their task. They may have difficulty finding related information located outside the current system being searched. IntLib brings the relevant resources directly to the user.

 

Michael Bieber, Min Song, Shuyuan Mary Ho, Eric Koppel, Vahid Hamidullah, Pawel Bokota
recker, mimi Integrating NSDL Resources and Inquiry Learning: A Professional Development Model for Teachers

Launched in 2002, the Instructional Architect Instructional Architect (IA.usu.edu) is a web-based tool in which teachers can quickly find interactive online learning and NSDL resources, and design activities for their students. Since 2005, almost 5,000 registered users have designed learning activities using over 40,000 resources. In the last year, the IA recorded over 250,000 visits.

Recent work has focused on developing a technology-oriented teacher professional development (PD) model using the IA, aimed at helping teachers find high-quality online learning resources and use them in designing effective inquiry learning activities for their students. The model uses problem-based learning (PBL) as its cornerstone inquiry approach.

To investigate the model’s effectiveness, we report results from two enactments of the PD model. In the first enactment, teachers learned PBL design skills concurrently with the technology skills, while in the second, the needed technology skills were presented prior to learning about PBL. Results are reported in terms of impact on teachers’ knowledge, attitudes, and design activities, as well as on the extent teachers designed PBL learning activities for their students. 

 

Mimi Recker and Andrew Walker
Bower, Rachael Introducing CWIS 2.0

CWIS - the Collection Workflow Integration System - is an open source software package created to assemble, organize, and share collections of data about resources, conforming to international and academic standards for metadata. CWIS was specifically created to help build collections of Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) resources and connect them into NSF's National Science Digital Library, but can be (and is being) used for a wide variety of other purposes.

Some of the features of CWIS include resource annotations and ratings, keyword searching (with phrase and exclusion support), fielded searching, recommender system, OAI export, RSS feed support, integrated metadata editing tool, user-definable schema (comes with full qualified Dublin Core), prepackaged taxonomies (includes GEM Subject taxonomy), user interface themes, turnkey installation and much more. The core features of CWIS will be covered in this poster session along with highlights from the new CWIS 2.0 release.

CWIS also has functionality (PHP) separated from appearance (HTML), making it relatively easy to customize. CWIS requires a web server that supports PHP and MySQL. The software is designed to run on a LAMP (Linux / Apache / MySQL / PHP) platform, but is also being run in the field on OS X, Solaris, and FreeBSD.

Edward Almasy and Rachael Bower
Butcher, Kirsten Is there an educational advantage to NSDL? Assessing impact on cognitive processes and learning outcomes

As NSDL continues to develop, a key question is whether NSDL tools and services have demonstrable educational impact. Assessing the educational impact of NSDL requires careful consideration of how NSDL can promote better selection of digital learning resources and deeper learning with those selected digital resources. We summarize past research and a new project investigating NSDL impact, with specific focus on efficient selection of digital resources for educational purposes (e.g., do NSDL users find better resources?) and how NSDL tools and services may promote successful learning with these resources as measured by users’ cognitive processes and learning outcomes.

 

Research will use a combination of laboratory and classroom research with three major user groups: preservice science educators, in-service science teachers, and classroom students. In the laboratory, two well-established methods in cognitive science research – eye tracking and verbal-protocol analysis —are being combined to perform a detailed and rigorous analysis of users’ cognitive processes during the search for and use of digital resources. In the classroom, research will assess the impact of NSDL-supported lesson plans on student thinking and learning.

 

Kirsten Butcher, Robert Zheng, Anne Cook
Bredin, Siobhan ITEST Learning Resource Center

About the Innovative Technology Experiences for Students and Teachers (ITEST) program

The ITEST program was established by the National Science Foundation in 2003 in direct response to current concerns and projections about the growing demand for STEM workers in the U.S. and seeks solutions to help ensure the breadth and depth of the STEM workforce. 

About the ITEST Learning Resource Center http://itestlrc.edc.org

The National ITEST Learning Resource Center at Education Development Center (EDC) collaborates with the 100+ ITEST Projects across the United States to achieve program goals, weave together promising practices, and leverage their combined achievements into new knowledge. Learnings, models and resources inform and guide formal and informal educators and policy makers in planning, implementing and evaluating IT-enriched STEM initiatives.

 

 

 

Siobhan Bredin Cynthia Newson
Ostwald, Jonathan Managing Primary Content with NSDL’s EduPak

This poster presents our research efforts to model, store, and retrieve primary content (e.g. images, documents) in EduPak, NSDL’s recently released open source package combining a digital repository, collection management system and search system. NSDL deploys an instance of EduPak as the operational library at www.nsdl.org, but it can also be downloaded and installed as a local repository solution.

In collaboration with the Colorado Alliance of Research Libraries, we have developed an experimental Metadata Encoding and Transmission Standard (METS) profile for packaging and transporting collections of metadata and primary (binary) content.  In addition to the experimental METS profile, we developed a process for ingesting the METS profile as an NDR collection that uses the NSDL data model of collection, metadata, aggregator, resource and metadata provider objects. The resource object is used to hold the primary content. This capability is now being used operationally by the NCAR Library to manage local collections of technical documents using EduPak.

Jonathan Ostwald, Keith Maull, Marguerite Roby, Jessica Colati, Tamara Sumner, Mike Wright
Bartolo, Laura MatDL: The Materials Digital Library Pathway

MatDL Pathway (http://matdl.org) assumes stewardship of significant content and services to support the integration of materials research and education. MatDL’s target audience is comprised of materials undergraduate and graduate students, educators, and researchers.  The MatDL consortium includes: Kent State University, MIT, National Institute of Standards and Technology, University of Michigan, Purdue University, and Iowa State University.  In addition to providing a Repository, MatDL offers the materials community: 1) tools such as the MatDL Wiki (http://matdl.org/matdlwiki), to describe, manage, exchange, archive, and disseminate data among national and international government-funded materials collaborations; 2) services and content for virtual labs (http://matdl.org/virtuallabs); 3) the MatForge (http://matforge.org/) workspace for open access development of computational materials modeling and simulation tools; and 4) workspace (http://teaching.matdl.org/) for collaborative development of core undergraduate materials teaching resources.  MatDL is expanding its collaborations across the materials community through joint efforts with MIT and Carnegie Mellon University (CCLI Phase 2) and professional societies such as the international Minerals, Metals & Materials Society (TMS).  A primary goal of MatDL is to help integrate research and education.  By offering materials educators convenient access to relevant, shared learning resources based on research, both teaching and learning within materials and cognate disciplines are positively impacted.

Laura M. Bartolo, Sharon C. Glotzer; Donald R. Sadoway; James A. Warren; Matthew John M. Krane; Adam C. Powell IV; Krishna Rajan; Diane Geraci; Vinod K. Tewary; Cathy S. Lowe
Klotz, Eugene Math Images

Math Images is a website with pages devoted to interesting and striking images based on mathematics. Because the math behind each image is explained simply and for different levels of comprehension, the site appeals to different audiences: teachers, students, and the general public. Moreover, the pages are constructed by undergraduates who choose interesting online images related to mathematics and then write about the math behind these images. Most of the students were rising sophomores, and others were not particularly mathematically strong, but all were quite successful in constructing well made and informative pages.  The Math Images site is a wiki which uses the same software as Wikipedia, with related ideas: student work is open to improvement and expansion. We're just finishing a CCLI Phase I version of the project, run as a summer program, and believe that the site could be very successfully used for class writing projects, as well. The wiki is now available for you to examine and use, and for your students to add image pages, http://mathforum.org/mathimages/

 

Gene Klotz
Moore, Lang Mathematical Sciences Digital Library

The Mathematical Sciences Digital Library (MathDL) is the NSDL Pathway Project of the Mathematical Association of America (MAA). MathDL hosts the online publication Loci, which provides interactive articles, resources for enabling teachers to use the history of mathematics in the teaching of mathematics, interactive student learning materials, supplements to the articles in the MAA’s print publications, and resources for authors of online materials. Through MAA Writing Awards, MathDL provides access to PDF copies of award winning articles from the MAA's print journals and biographical sketches of award winners. Math in the News and On This Day (in math) are daily features. Users of MathDL may search over resources held or cataloged by twelve partner collections.

Lang Moore Tom Leathrum
Pillai, Sarita Middle School Portal 2: Math and Science Pathways (MSP2)

The Middle School Portal 2: Math and Science Pathways (MSP2) supports middle grades educators and youth with high-quality, standards-based resources and promotes collaboration and knowledge-sharing among its users. Teachers use MSP2 to increase content knowledge in science, mathematics, technology and appropriate pedagogy for youth ages 10 to 15 years. MSP2 also connects middle school youth to information on mathematics, science, and technology, as well as health, safety, and career exploration.  Web 2.0 tools, including blogs, wikis, podcasts, RSS feeds, and social networking services, foster dynamic, collaborative experiences for teachers that promote creation, modification, and sharing of resources, facilitate professional development, and integrate technology into existing practice. As a result of interaction with MSP2 content, tools, and services, young people in the middle grades increase their ability to explore, discover ideas, problem solve, think critically, communicate, use technology in a productive and responsible manner, and become globally aware. They also become aware of educational pathways that lead to careers in science, mathematics, and technology.  MSP2 is a project of The Ohio State University, National Middle School Association, and Education Development Center, Inc.

Kimberly Lightle (Ohio State University), Mary Henton (National Middle School Association), Sarita Pillai (Education Development Center, Inc.)
Whitworth, Christi National Dissemination of PARI Digital Resources

Pisgah Astronomical Research Institute is a new awardee that offers three data resources and teacher professional development opportunities in NSDL.  The three PARI resources are the Astronomical Photographic Data Archive (APDA), Stellar Classification Online Public Exploration (SCOPE), and School of Galactic Radio Astronomy (SGRA).  APDA houses over 50,000 astronomical glass plates dating back 100 years.  These plates are set to be digitized for continued use in the future.  SCOPE utilizes one collection of stellar spectra in APDA to allow citizen scientists to classify stars in a classroom setting or on their own.  SGRA trains teachers and students to use a radio telescope via the Internet from their classroom for real-time data acquisition.  These projects are expanding towards a national level and are finding connections to other NSDL resources.

Christi Whitworth, Michael W. Castelaz
Ginger, Katy NSDL Collections: Focus, Contribute, Tools & Assessment

This poster provides information on 1) tools and methods for accessioning
a collection, 2) producing quality metadata and 3) understanding the new
scope and focus of the NSDL collection.

The scope of and focus of the NSDL collection is evolving to emphasize
teaching and learning materials that lead to impacts in education and the
classroom. As a result, this focus tends to favor resources that are
active, use inquiry, authentic learning and real-time data, experiences
and situations. This also means the Quality Guidelines of the NSDL
Collection Development Policy are more important than ever. Come learn
about these guidelines and view a collections assessment that indicates
the distribution of NSDL holdings.

In NSDL, a collection contains item-level metadata for individual
resources (URLs) in the collection.  For collections that are approved,
the NSDL Data Repository (NDR) accepts item-level metadata via
•       Direct communication with the NDR API
•       Through a hosted or locally installed NSDL Collection System (NCS)
•       Via OAI-PMH (Open Archives Initiative-Protocol for Metadata Harvesting)
•       Via RSS

While any metadata format can be used in the above methods, only
item-level metadata that is provided in the correct XML format of NSDL_DC
is discoverable at the main library site of NSDL.org. Learn strategies and
how-to information on when to use the above methods and how.

To support the discovery and re-use of NSDL materials, it is vital to
describe resource effectively and appropriately. Come and learn the top 5
actions you can take to improve your metadata to support the NSDL scope
and focus. This includes: the use of controlled vocabularies, educational
standards, writing a better description, keywords and the cataloging
experience (producing valid XML, training catalogers).

Kathryn Ginger, Tim Cornwell, Laura Lusk
Birkland, Aaron NSDL EduPak: An open source education-oriented repository solution

Educational organizations and institutions focused on establishing specialized digital collections, conducting educational research, or providing students, teachers and instructors with discipline-oriented pedagogical products and tools require basic technology to begin building educational digital repositories. To help meet these needs, NDSL's Technical Network Services (TNS) has announced the release of NSDL EduPak. NSDL EduPak consists of several applications and web services used to implement nsdl.org packaged into a conbenient bundle. This poster reviews the core EduPak components, and describes the value added by each component in building education-oriented applications.

McMartin, Flora NSDL Reflections on the Impacts of Collaboration on Research and Development

We are collecting the "reflections" on the collaborative development of the National Science Digital Library (NSDL). The blogsite, http://nsdlreflections.wordpress.com/, is a place for NSDL participants to tell the story of how they think NSDL was formed, grew and is continuing to grow. It is also a place for the community to discuss and learn from these reflections as well as respond to a series of ‘hot topics’ questions regarding the NSDL. The site is open to all members of the NSDL community; your comments will help round out the living history of the NSDL.

 

Flora McMartin, Susan Jesuroga, Brandon Muramatsu, Dave McArthur
Clark, Sharon NSDL Science Literacy Maps

The NSDL Science Literacy Maps are an interactive graphical interface that helps K-12 educators and learners understand the relationships between science concepts and to find associated educational resources. The interactive maps are generated through a Web 2.0 API that lets developers embed the maps in their own Web sites and display educational resources and other information in the maps. The maps illustrate learning goals for different grades, and the relationships between goals, for K-12 students across a range of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) disciplines.  Tutorials will be introduced that describes how to create your own Science Literacy Maps for your website, align resources and customize the interface.

John Weatherley, DLS, UCAR [jweather@ucar.edu]; Tammy Sumner, DLS, University of Colorado at Boulder [tsumner@colorado.edu] Sharon Clark, DLS, UCAR [sclark@ucar.edu]
Loew, Christine Open and Shared Educational STEM Resources in the Middle School

Curriki, an online community for creating and sharing open source curricula, and the Middle School Portal 2: Math and Science Pathways (MSP2) project, are collaborating to provide an integrated learning environment and resource repository that is centered on a culture of collective participation. The move is in response to today's restrictive budget environment, in which school districts must think creatively to budget for high quality curriculum -- including STEM curriculum. The proliferation of technology, the high cost of traditional textbooks, and the focus on engaging students in 21st century learning are compelling many stakeholders to address the growing demand for digital content to adapt to the new learning environment. These stakeholders include publishers, K–12 schools and universities, nonprofits and government organizations. This situation has, in this instance, fostered a partnership where educators create and distribute high-quality curricula.

Christine Loew, Curriki
Fox, Sean Pedagogies in Action: A Community Service Weaving Teaching Methods to Examples for Learning

How can digital libraries best support the implementation of their materials in ways that reflect best practice in teaching methods and engage students in learning? SERC's Pedagogic Service http://serc.carleton.edu/sp/service/ allows partners to embed information about effective teaching into their existing websites and to tie this pedagogic guidance to activites and resources in their collections. Current partners include NSDL pathways and other NSF-sponsored digital libraries: Physics (ComPADRE), Quantitative Social Sciences (Teaching with Data), Statistics (CAUSEweb), Economics (Starting Point: Teaching and Learning Economics), Biology (MLER, MERLOT) and Earth Science (Starting Point, ERESE).

The materials available through the service are highlighted in the Pedagogies in Action portal http://serc.carleton.edu/sp/  which provides information on more than 40 teaching methods  Each method is described with pages addressing what the method is, why or when it is useful, and how it can be implemented. New methods added this year include  Jigsaw, Teaching the Process of Science, Guided Discovery Problems,  Teaching Urban Students, Using ConceptTests, and Teaching with Google Earth.  The collection of 775 example teaching activities shows specifically how each method has been used to teach concepts in a variety of disciplines. Contributing partners report that use of the Pedagogic Service improved their processes for developing and disseminating content to a wider and more diverse audience, resulting in a greater number of resources for their users.

Cathryn Manduca, Sean Fox, Ellen Iverson
Morgan, Glenda Student use of digital learning materials: Implications for the NSDL

 

Our project will investigate how undergraduate students in STEM disciplines use digital learning materials, what impact this use has on their learning, and what the implications might be for NSDL collections. We describe the mixed-methods approach we will be using to study the topic, combining a number of discipline-specific focus groups at a wide range of institutions with a large sample-size survey of undergraduate STEM students from numerous colleges and universities around the country.  The research results will not only help illustrate the value of NSDL collections but will provide insight as to how collections and services can be improved.

 

Glenda Morgan Flora McMartin Joshua Morrill Alan Wolf Patsy Moskal Charles Dziuban
Sicker, Ted Teachers' Domain Pathways Stage II

The poster will highlight the past year's work of the Teachers' Domain Pathway from WGBH Educational Foundation, including development of social media features, expansion of our user base and development of customized state editions, archiving, dissemination activities, and workshop protocol development.

Ted Sicker, Daniella Quiñones, Peter Pinch
DeWitt, John TeachingWithData.org

TeachingWithData.org (TwD) will promote quantitative literacy by helping instructors to use real data in social science classes. The goal is to infuse quantitative reasoning throughout the social science curriculum and to bridge the gap between substantive courses and classes in methodology and statistics. Two key components of the developing pathway are the Social Science Data Analysis Network and the Online Learning Center at the Inter-university Consortium for Political and Social Research. Both of these resources provide data extracts, online analysis tools, student exercises, and other materials that help instructors integrate data from the census, opinion polls, and advanced social science surveys into their courses. The TwD project will provide comprehensive links to these materials and other resources promoting quantitative literacy, such as teaching modules, data sets and sources, applications for statistics and mapping, and research on teaching and learning. Future TwD development aims to provide faculty with tools to easily create teaching modules for their students and share them with others. The primary audience for the project will be faculty in disciplines such as sociology, political science, economics, geography, and social psychology. The poster describes these aims, presents illustrative teaching materials, and introduces the partners in the TwD project.

 

George C. Alter, William H. Frey, Lynette Hoelter, John P. DeWitt, Suzanne Hodge
Akbar, Monika The AlgoViz Portal: Lowering the Barriers for Entry into an Online Educational Community

While algorithm visualizations (AVs) are viewed as having potential for improving computer science education, the rate of AV use has progressed little from the mid 1990s.  CS faculty indicate that impediments to successful use of AVs include: difficulties in finding quality AVs on desired topics; difficulties in adapting AVs to the classroom; and lack of knowledge on their deployment. Many existing AVs are of little pedagogical value, and there is poor distribution of topical coverage.

 

The problem is not lack of AVs or AV collections. We need to better focus the efforts of AV developers and users. We seek to establish a new model for online educational communities, less focussed on the "digital library" model of information found at a website. The focus will be on community-driven content through members' discussions, reviews, and ratings of content. To gain sufficient community input, we must actively lower barriers to  participation by incorporating content and community input into the notification streams for our community members. This includes traditional  dissemination mechanisms (content websites, forums, email, online blogs, newsletters) and newer notification streams (Twitter, social networking sites  where users can subscribe to receive notification as part of their everyday online life). Our prototype portal (http://algoviz.org) distributes information through numerous channels. Our innovations will be directly applicable to a broad range of educational communities within Ensemble and  NSDL.

 

Clifford A. Shaffer, Stephen H. Edwards, Monika Akbar
Carey, Tom The Developmental Mathematics Collection: Aggregating Regional Collections of Exemplary Practices, Tools and Resources

The Developmental Mathematics Collection, a new NSDL project, focuses on exemplary teaching practices and learning activities for college and university students in developmental mathematics courses (prerequisite to collegiate credit).

 

 

In addition to addressing a new area of emphasis within the MathDL pathway, the DMC project features a new approach to collection management and sustainability. Regional faculty teams are collecting exemplary practices, tools and resources used by their faculty; these compendiums combine open contributions of resources and experiences by faculty with editorial processes to categorize contributions in terms of the evidence base on their use. The regional collections are intended to promote community ownership and sustainability at the local level; the aggregation and integration are intended to ‘raise the bar’ for local teaching practices and provide a network infrastructure to sustain a national collection.

 

The initial team consists of faculty from six San Diego community colleges collaborating in a course transformation program funded by the William and Flora Hewlett Foundation, in partnership with the state-wide Basic Skills Initiative in the California Community Colleges. Two additional regional networks for course redesign in developmental math started in Fall 2009, in the San Francisco region and the Los Angeles Community College District.

 

Tom Carey, Center for Research in Mathematics and Science Education, San Diego State University; Karon Klipple, Mathematics Department, San Diego City College; Bohdan Rhodehamel, Mathematics Department, Southwestern College
Mason, Bruce The Physics Classroom: 20,000 per day and growing

The Physics Classroom is one of the most widely used physics web sites for introductory physics. Started in 1997 by students and teachers in Illinois, this site is widely recognized by high school teachers all over the country. Last year the author of the site and ComPADRE partnered to create a home for these materials because of a loss a commercial sponsor and the load in the school's servers. The results of this collaboration will be explored in this poster including the growth in usage, the expansion and update of the materials available to the general public, and plans for future growth, connections to the central library, and sustainability.

Tom Henderson, ComPADRE staff