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Published Research

Parents Explain More Often to Boys than to Girls during Shared Scientific Thinking (2001)

Kevin Crowley, Maureen Callanan, Harriet Tenenbaum, & Elizabeth Allen

http://www.jstor.org/stable/40063590 ($$)

Young children's everyday scientific thinking often occurs in the context of parent-child interactions. In a study of naturally occurring family conversation, parents were three times more likely to explain science to boys than to girls while using interactive science exhibits in a museum. This difference in explanation occurred despite the fact that parents were equally likely to talk to their male and female children about how to use the exhibits and about the evidence generated by the exhibits. The findings suggest that parents engaged in informal science activities with their children may be unintentionally contributing to a gender gap in children's scientific literacy well before children encounter formal science instruction in grade school.

Psychological Science, Vol. 12, No. 3 (May, 2001), 258-261 

 

Identifying and supporting shared scientific reasoning in parent-child interactions (1998)

Kevin Crowley & Maureen Callanan

http://www.museumlearning.org/crowley9.pdf

Journal of Museum Education, 23 (1998), 12-17

 

Shared scientific thinking in everyday parent-child activity (2001)

Kevin Crowley, Maureen Callanan, Jennifer Jipson, Jodi Galco, Karen Topping, & Jeff Shrager

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1002/sce.1035/abstract ($$)

Current accounts of the development of scientific reasoning focus on individual children's ability to coordinate the collection and evaluation of evidence with the creation of theories to explain the evidence. This observational study of parent–child interactions in a children's museum demonstrated that parents shape and support children's scientific thinking in everyday, nonobligatory activity. When children engaged an exhibit with parents, their exploration of evidence was observed to be longer, broader, and more focused on relevant comparisons than children who engaged the exhibit without their parents. Parents were observed to talk to children about how to select and encode appropriate evidence and how to make direct comparisons between the most informative kinds of evidence. Parents also sometimes assumed the role of explainer by casting children's experience in causal terms, connecting the experience to prior knowledge, or introducing abstract principles. We discuss these findings with respect to two dimensions of children's scientific thinking: developments in evidence collection and developments in theory construction.

Sci Ed 85 (2001), 712–732

 

Parents' science talk to their children in Mexican-descent families residing in the USA (2008)

Harriet Tenenbaum & Maureen Callanan

http://jbd.sagepub.com/content/32/1/1.abstract ($$)

Everyday parent—child conversations may support children's scientific understanding. The types and frequency of parent—child science talk may vary with the cultural and schooling background of the participants, and yet most research in the USA focuses on highly schooled European-American families. This study investigated 40 Mexican-descent parents' science talk with their children (mean age = 5 years 7 months, range = 2 years 10 months to 8 years 6 months). Parents were divided between a higher schooling group who had completed secondary school, and a basic schooling group who had fewer than 12 years of formal schooling. Parents and children were videotaped engaging with science exhibits at a children's museum and at home. Conversations were coded in terms of parents' explanatory talk. In both contexts, Mexican-descent parents engaged children in explanatory science talk. At the museum, parents in the higher schooling group used more causal explanations, scientific principles explanations, and encouraging predictions types of explanations than did parents in the basic schooling group. By contrast, the only difference at home was that parents in the higher schooling group used more encouraging predictions talk than parents in the basic schooling group. Parents who had been to museums used more explanations than parents who had never visited a museum. The results suggest that while explanatory speech differed somewhat in two groups of Mexican-descent parents varying in formal schooling, all of these children from Mexican-descent families experienced some conversations that were relevant for their developing science literacy.

International Journal of Behavioral Development, Vol. 32 No 1, (2008), 1-12

 

Conversations about Science across Activities in Mexican-descent Families (2007)

Deborah Siegel, Jennifer Esterly, Maureen Callanan, Ramser Wright, & Rocio Navarro

http://www.tandfonline.com/doi/abs/10.1080/09500690701494100 ($$)

Parent-child "everyday" conversations have been suggested as a source of children's early science learning. If such conversations are important, then it would be pertinent to know whether children from different family backgrounds have different experiences talking about science in informal settings. We focus on the relation between parents' schooling and both their explanatory talk in science-related activities and the styles of interaction they use with their children. Families from different schooling backgrounds within one under-represented group in science education--Mexican-descent families--were included in this study. Forty families were observed in two science-related activities. In the sink-or-float task, families were asked to predict which of a variety of objects would sink and which would float, and then to test their predictions in a tub of water. The second activity was an open-ended visit to a local children's museum. Results showed similar patterns in scientific talk on the sink-or-float task across the two groups. However, the interaction style varied with schooling across the two activities; parents with higher schooling were more directive than parents with basic schooling. Interaction style was also found to vary with task structure, with more open-ended tasks affording more collaborative interactions. Such research into parent-child conversations in science-related activities can help begin to guide us in bridging children's learning environments--home, school, and museum--and potentially fostering children's science learning, particularly in those groups under-represented in the sciences. (Contains 2 tables, 1 figure and 4 notes.)

International Journal of Science Education, Vol. 29 No 12, (2007), 1447 - 1466

Children's Discovery Museum of San Jose Vietnamese Audience Development Initiative Evaluation

Garibay Group
Fall/Winter 2008

VADI Evaluation Report

The Children's Discovery Museum launched the Vietnamese Audience Development Initiative (VADI) with the goal of better serving the Vietnamese community in San Jose. CDM contracted with Garibay Group to conduct an evaluation of the Initiative. The primary goals of the evaluation were to determine the degree to which the project achieved its goals and to identify "lessons learned" that could inform future strategic planning and outreach methods to better bridge the CDM with Vietnamese families.


2005 Evaluation Report - Summer of Service

John Nash

Full Report

Summer of Service (SOS) is a summer camp for youth entering 7th-10th grades designed and managed by the Children's Discovery Museum of San Jose. SOS operates four two week camps between June and August providing five teams of youth an opportunity to work in the museum, mentor young children, participate in environmental service activities, engage in community outreach, and develop specialized media skills. Youth may enroll in one or all four sessions.

Goals of the Evaluation

  • To identify the impact that SOS has on participants, especially related to certain developmental assets, and key
    program activities via youth and parent opinion;
  • To explore the role SOS plays in increasing museum capacity through its staff training and youth development
    programming.

 

Discovery Youth Evaluations

Dan Gilbert, 2001-2003 Evaluations, and Sepehr Moghadam, 2003-2004 evaluation

Full Reports

Children's Discovery Museum of San Jose (CDM) has served youth ages 10-14 for over three years through the comprehensive after school and summer program, Discovery Youth. The program takes young adolescents' healthy physical and emotional development as its theme, while using multimedia
production, service learning, and inquiry-based methods as its approach, while fully utilizing CDM's unique learning environment. The program's overarching goal promotes the healthy emotional development of young adolescents by strengthening opportunities for youth to participate in meaningful and productive out-of-school hours programming; to develop skills in technology; to gain confidence in social skills with peers and adults and help prepare them for the future; and to prove to themselves and to adults that they are important resources to the community.

 






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