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Articles

Using a planetarium fieldtrip to engage young children in three-dimensional learning through representations, patterns, and lunar phenomena

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Pages 193-212 | Received 04 Nov 2016, Accepted 06 Feb 2018, Published online: 17 Feb 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Fieldtrips to informal science institutions can be opportunities for children to engage in three-dimensional learning, which is the integration of core disciplinary ideas, science practices, and cross-cutting concepts. We explored the question of whether the combination of a planetarium fieldtrip and classroom lessons could support young children's three-dimensional learning in astronomy. We assessed first grade students’ (6–7-year-olds; N = 46) three-dimensional learning at the intersection of lunar phenomena, representational practices, and patterns. Students’ were interviewed, where they both described their understanding verbally and constructed representations, before the intervention, after the intervention, and one year later. A mixed-methods analysis demonstrated significant improvement in students’ three-dimensional learning, focused on the apparent daily motion of the Moon and lunar phases. Analysis of both interview results and audio/video of the intervention suggest that the planetarium fieldtrip provided students with a source of evidence for concepts and patterns related to scientific phenomena, which was then the subject of further inquiry in the classroom as students integrated new science concepts and patterns with their own ideas for how to create scientific representations. These findings suggest that fieldtrips, when supported by students’ classroom experiences, can serve an important role in engaging young children in three-dimensional learning and thus pointing to ways that informal science venues can work with formal educators to engage students in doing science.

Acknowledgements

We would like to thank Joanne Young and Audio Visual Imagineering for supporting and funding the production of the planetarium program as well as the teachers who worked with us to implement the instruction with their students.

Disclosure statement

In accordance with Taylor & Francis policy and our ethical obligations as researchers, we are reporting that the second author receives royalties from sales of the planetarium program produced as a result of this study.

Additional information

Funding

This work was partially funded by a Middle Atlantic Planetarium Society (MAPS) Education Research Grant.

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