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Information on IES-Funded Research
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National Research & Development Center on Cognition and Science Instruction

NCER
Program: Education Research and Development Centers
Program topic(s): Improving Low Achieving Schools , Innovation in Education Reform
Award amount: $9,995,038
Principal investigator: F. Joseph Merlino
Awardee:
21st Century Partnership for STEM Education
Year: 2008
Award period: 5 years (07/01/2008 - 06/30/2013)
Project type:
Other
Award number: R305C080009

Purpose

The purpose of the National Center on Cognition and Science Instruction (NCCSI) was to modify and adapt two widely used middle-school science curricula by applying three theoretical principles of cognitive science: analogical reasoning, spatial reasoning, and student prior knowledge. Additionally, professional development materials were created. The efficacy of the modified curricula and the support materials were examined with scientifically rigorous, randomized controlled trials. Established through a five-year, $10.0 million grant from the Institute of Education Sciences (IES) of the U.S. Department of Education, the NCCSI was staffed with nationally-recognized experts in cognitive psychology, science education and instruction, teacher professional development, and research evaluation and methodology.

Project Activities

Changes were made to the life science, physical science, and earth science units of two widely-used curricula: Holt and FOSS. There was a high intersection of content between the two curricula and state standardized science assessments. The Cognitive Science Teams (CSTs) designed and conducted small-scale pilot studies, followed by selection and refinement of the adaptations. Next, the CSTs worked with the Professional Development Teams (PDTs) to produce professional development materials to support teaching the specified curriculum through the use of the adaptations. An efficacy study was conducted to evaluate the impact of these adaptations on student learning after they underwent the full cycle of small-scale piloting and one year of large scale testing, analysis and modification. Middle-schools in Delaware, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania were randomly assigned to one of three experimental treatment groups: (1) full treatment, with curriculum adaptations and professional development on both the adaptations and curriculum content; (2) limited treatment, with standard Holt or FOSS curriculum and professional development on the curriculum content; and (3) control condition, with standard Holt or FOSS curriculum with no additional professional development. Outcome measures included grade 8 state standardized science assessments and researcher-developed science assessments. Three-level hierarchical linear models (with students nested within classrooms nested within schools) were used to examine the effect of the science curriculum adaptations on student achievement.

People and institutions involved

IES program contact(s)

Christina Chhin

Education Research Analyst
NCER

Project contributors

Andrew Porter

Key Personnel
University of Pennsylvania

Robert Boruch

Key Personnel

Rebecca Maynard

Key Personnel

Laura Desimone

Key Personnel
University of Pennsylvania

Christian Schunn

Key Personnel

Nora S. Newcombe

Key Personnel

Jennifer Cromley

Key Personnel

Christine Massey

Key Personnel
University of Pennsylvania

Kalyani Raghaven

Key Personnel

Timothy Nokes

Key Personnel

Keith Kershner

Key Personnel

Donna Cleland

Key Personnel

Gary Cooper

Key Personnel

Barbara Stankus

Key Personnel

Products and publications

ERIC Citations: Find available citations in ERIC for this award here.

Journal article, monograph, or newsletter

Alfieri, L., Nokes-Malach, T.J., and Schunn, C.D. (2013). Learning Through Case Comparisons: A Meta-Analytic Review. Educational Psychologist, 48(2): 87-113.

Covay Minor, E., Desimone, L.M., Caines Lee, J., and Hochberg, E. (2016). Insights on how to Shape Teacher Learning Policy: The Role of Teacher Content Knowledge in Explaining Differential Effects of Professional Development. Education Policy Analysis Archives, 24(61): 1-34.

Cromley, J.G., Weisberg, S.M., Dai, T., Newcombe, N.S., Schunn, C.D., Massey, C., and Merlino, F.J. (2016). Improving Middle School Science Learning Using Diagrammatic Reasoning. Science Education, 100(6): 1184-1213.

Porter, A.C., Polikoff, M.S., Barghaus, K.M., and Yang, R. (2013). Constructing Aligned Assessments: Using Automated Test Construction. Educational Researcher, 42(8): 415-423.

Proceeding

Resnick, I., Shipley, T.F., Newcombe, N., Massey, C., and Wills, T. (2012). Examining the Representation and Understanding of Large Magnitudes Using the Hierarchical Alignment Model of Analogical Reasoning. In Proceedings of the 34th Annual Conference of the Cognitive Science Society (pp. 917-922). Austin, TX: Cognitive Science Society.

Project website:

https://www.cogscied.org/

Supplemental information

Topic: Cognition and Science Instruction

Questions about this project?

To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.

 

Tags

CognitionPolicies and StandardsScienceTeaching

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Questions about this project?

To answer additional questions about this project or provide feedback, please contact the program officer.

 

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