New $7 million initiative seeks to spark curiosity in Kβ12 science students
William Penuel, a professor in the Institute of Cognitive Science (ICS), imagines science classrooms where children are free to explore what makes them curiousβasking then answering their own questions on topics ranging from ocean acidification to antibiotic resistance in hospitals.
Penuel and his colleagues are working to foster those kinds of learning spaces through a new $7 million effort thatβs part of a national initiative called OpenSciEd. The team will develop three yearsβ worth of high school science curriculum materials that are open access and free for all. The researchers want to show young people that science isnβt just about following directions in a labβit can be a whole new way of looking at the world around them.
βWeβre really trying to help students understand that science is not just a body of knowledge but practices for developing, critiquing and defending that knowledge,β Penuel said.
Principal investigator
William Penuel
Funding
Carnegie Corporation of New York (CCNY); OpenSciEd
Collaboration + support
BSCS Science Learning; the Charles A. Dana Center at the University of Texas at Austin; Denver Public Schools; Institute of Cognitive Science; Northwestern University; CU ΊωΒ«ΝήΚΣΖ΅ School of Education
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New $7 million initiative seeks to spark curiosity in K-12 science students