Watts Up With Energy? A series of Learning Modules
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About Watts Up Energy Modules

Project-at-a-glance/Summary / Focus groups / Pilot-test / Project documentation /Contact Us  

 
Advanced Technology Environmental Education Center (ATEEC)

Advanced Technology Environmental Education Center
 
Davenport Public Library
Davenport Public Library
 
Family Museum of Arts and Science
Family Museum
 
MidAmerican Energy
MidAmerican Energy
 
Mississippi Bend Area Education Agency (AEA)
Mississippi Bend Area Educational Center
 
National Renewable Energy Lab (NREL)
NREL
 
Laboratory for Energy and the Environment (LFEE) at Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT)
Labratory for Energy and the Environment
 
Local school districts  
 

 

IMLS Watts Up with Energy? is funded by a grant from the Institute of Museum and Library Services.

 

 

Project-at-a-glance

Overall exhibit:
  • Hands-on multimedia displays with interactive computer-based learning modules. Displays will be physically located at museum.Four learning modules will be integrated within displays and also available separately for classroom presentation and computer-based use.
  • Web site available for feedback, updates, and additional resources
Target audiences:
  • K-5 students and familiesGeneral public
  • K-5 educators (formal & informal)

Kids Playing on Watts Up With Energy Exhibit
Module/display topics:
  • Energy is Everywhere! 
    • What is energy? (Age-appropriate discussion of energy=work (e.g., motion, heat, stored, food, fuel/power))
    • Where does energy come from? (brief explanation of sources, both traditional & renewable)
    • Why do we need energy?
  • Living with Energy
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    • How does our use of energy affect our world?
    • Energy technologies

Watts Up With Energy Main Menu Screen

  • What can we do?
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    • Why is energy such a hot topic with adults? Do we need to conserve energy? (Present an objective explanation & recommend using facts to make decisions.)
    • What can I (my family, my school, my community) do to conserve energy?
  • Sun, wind, water, & earth: Renewable energy
    • How do we get energy from the wind?...from the sun (solar)?...from the ground (geothermal)?...from water (hydro)?...from plants (biomass)?...from fuel cells (hydrogen)?

     

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Summary

Watts Up with Energy?: A Collaboration Between Libraries, Museums, Industry, Research Labs, and School Districts to Bring Math and Science to Elementary StudentsOne of the most critical and challenging environmental issues in the United States today is our energy use and policy. The use of energy affects every segment of the population, from the young and old to the rich and poor. Thus the topic of energy presents a common ground and is a subject to which nearly everyone can relate. From an educational perspective, it provides an ideal attention-getting mechanism and motivation for learning, as well as an ideal basis for sound experiential and contextual teaching and learning of the math and science skills involved in energy issues. Using the instructional materials created through this project, parents and educators will be able to capitalize on the contextual connection of a subject with both current and long-term interest and implications to students. The modules will incorporate an emphasis on the use of sound science in personal and public decision-making. Connected by a RiverThe Advanced Technology Environmental Education Center (ATEEC) of the Eastern Iowa Community College District (EICCD) partnered with a library and museum in a 2001 IMLS grant to produce learning modules called Connected by a River around the theme of the environment of the Mississippi River for middle school students. The latest collaborative project, Watts Up with Energy?, grows from a desire to build on this unique alliance and incorporate several new strategies including adding a family museum that specifically targets science activities to children to develop museum displays; learning modules written for the elementary student level; the business and industry community added to the partnership to incorporate real-world energy experiences; and research labs added to the partnership to infuse emerging knowledge and technologies into the learning modules.In this project, ATEEC has partnered with the Davenport Public Library, the Family Museum of Arts and Science, the Mississippi Bend Area Education Agency, local school districts, MidAmerican Energy Company, and the National Renewable Energy Laboratory to develop a working model of collaboration called Watts Up with Energy that will produce learning modules in the area of energy to bring math and science into the hands of elementary students through the study of the environment. The project will be implemented over a 24-month period between October 2004 and September 2006. The following objectives and activities will take place:
  1. Four learning modules related to energy topics will be developed for Web-based, DVD or CD-ROM delivery for elementary students. The learning modules will be developed through a collaboration between elementary school teachers, content experts, research experts, business and industry experts, and instructional designers. Collaborative partner activities will be developed to support the learning modules. Museum displays will be developed around the four learning module themes and will focus on scientific and mathematical concepts that are possible solutions to real world problems and connect scientific principles demonstrated by the displays with everyday life of the student visitor. A library Web site will be developed to provide a platform for the learning modules to allow project participants to share and research resources, and to house all project developed information including the learning modules, related activities, and links to energy research.
  2. Project outcomes and research results will be evaluated. Ten elementary classrooms will pilot-test the learning modules, museum displays, and library Web site to determine if the project enhanced student interest and use of museum and library resources, resulted in student learning as measured against national standards and benchmarks; and supported the expansion and further development of the role of museums and libraries in the core educational process.
Results of the project will include the development of four learning modules in Web-based, DVD, and/or CD-ROM format using energy as a contextual teaching source; the creation of a Watts Up with Energy project Web site, museum exhibits and displays for elementary children that center around the themes of the energy modules; published articles about the project collaboration; and conference presentations in the fields of library science, education, and museums.

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Focus groups

Part of needs analysis. Three informal focus groups were interviewed in January and February of 2005: general public, elementary school teachers, museum-goers (children and families). Click here for summaries of the group discussions.The purpose of the focus group interviews was to assess:
  • Validity of a sustainable energy exhibit & the proposed topic areas,Age-level of formal energy education,Characteristics of learners,Effective characteristics of existing exhibits,Suggestions for exhibit themes, and
  • Suggestions for exhibit materials and activities.
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Pilot-test

Part of the formative evaluation process. The first module "Energy is Everywhere," has been developed as a prototype and will be pilot-tested in 2006 in local fourth grade science classrooms. The companion display was pilot-tested in the museum, with 30 local students participating in an after-school program. The Watts Up project team will collect, coordinate, and evaluate feedback. The feedback will be used to improve the first module/display and to inform the development of the following three modules. The purposes of the pilot-testing are to determine if the project:
  • Enhances student interest and use of museum and library resources, Results in student learning as measured against national standards and benchmarks, and
  • Supports the expansion and further development of the role of museums and libraries in the core educational process.

Click here for the project's overall evaluation plan. Top

 

Project documentation (pdf files--Acrobat Reader required)

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Contact info

For more information on the Watts Up with Energy project, contact ATEEC.

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Copyright ATEEC 2006