Project description
Expand - Research in Norwegian Science centers.
1. Short summary
The research program Expand - Research in Norwegian Science centers, was initiated by Statoil in
2011 in collaboration with INSPIRIA Science Center, Section for Learning and Teacher Education,
Department of Mathematical Sciences and Technology, Norwegian University of Life Sciences,
Norwegian Centre for Science Education and Norwegian Research Council. The project collaboration
has as its main objective to address the need for research based development of science centres. Based
on two evaluations (Quin 2006, Persson et al 2009) initiated by The Norwegian Research Council,
there is an expressed need for research understanding the role of Science centers as learning arenas in
Norwegian context, in what ways science centers may supplement science communication and
learning, and to understand the unique aspects about science centers as learning arenas between
between schools and other learning sites in the Norwegian educational context. Also, these
evaluations pointed to the need to understand science centers role for engagement, interest and
recruitment to science, and the need for further education and training of science center staff.
Expand will include the aspects raised in these evaluation in its research and development program.
This with the aim to approach the relation between design and learning in science centres from
multiple empirical and theoretical angles. This will include a focus on the various forms of
interactions in science centre exhibitions, a focus on developing sustainable research and observation
methods to guide future for developments, a focus on the collaborative relationship between school
and science centre, as well as a focus on continuing professional development (CPD) for science
center staff and teachers by way of a CPD module, a research network and a national conference.
Expand will especially focus on the social and cultural aspects of students building linkages to
learning subjects across science centres and the school. Expand in this way raises questions around
the conceptualisation and implementation of science learning in the age of open education and
learning 2.0 (Brown and Adler 2008) in design of interactions and learning in science centre
exhibitions and in collaborations between science centers and schools.
Expand is a practise-based research and development project that builds on methods of user
engagements drawn form action-research and participatory research. By way of multiple methods and
approaches does the project seek to address following aspects;
1. Science center as learning arenas: In what ways are science centers important, supplementing
learning arenas for learning in schools. What are the unique aspects about science centers as
learning arenas?
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2. Engagement: How may science centers increase interest in science? In what ways do science
centers contribute to society? Does the visits to science center increase interest for future
carriere in science?
3. Competence building among staff: How should science centers continue their development in
the future? How can science centers build a sustainable grounding?
These focus points build central topics of that frame 5 subprojects crossing qualitative and
quantitative approaches. The Expand research program collaborates closely with INSPERIA science
centre as a central pilot case for collaborative development, involving INSPERIA educators in
developing observation methods suitable for ethnographic based observation of interactions with
objects and interactives in exhibitions. And also in the development of evaluating didactic aspects of
science centre teaching in educational programmes with this specific centre as a pilot for a more
general development of evaluation systems. It is a central objective for the project that the evaluation
methods developed will also be transferable to other centres.
The project involves two researchers, a PhD as well as master students at Teacher Education in
Natural Sciences, Norwegian University of Life Sciences in addition to museum professionals at
INSPERIA and several of the 8 regional science centres in Norway.
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2. Introduction: Learning research in science centers Many science centres are transforming towards highlighting the complexity of science and complex
issues that confront citizens in modern democracies (Henriksen and Frøyland 2000) and become
places for encounter with controversies of scientific development, such as in the Norwegian BRUDD
projects (Frøyland 2006). In this way, the discussion of the educational role of science centres
becomes part of broader debates on science communication, science literacy and engagement with
scientific issue that is discussed in various fields such as media studies, science and technology
studies, environmental and sustainability discussions, as well as in the field of education and learning.
The various fields and approaches are closely related to the diverging forms and aspects related to
learning and knowledge of science; the science learning in school, the out-of-school learning
programs, issues of diversity, gender and learning, learning form media and digital technologies,
learning in museums and designed environments, the nature of learning and everyday and family-
based learning. These diverging venues and approaches to learning science do also elicit a number of
gaps that might influence people`s engagement and participation with science, in and across contexts
of educational institutions.
The role of informal environments for learning science has especially been underlined by
studies that focus on the various aspects of how people make meaning related to science and the range
of actors involved in their learning (Bell et al. 2009, Falk et al 2012). Mainly, science learning has
been related to issues such as how to develop interest for science, how understanding science
knowledge develop, how to engage in scientific reasoning, how to stimulate to reflection on science
or to engage in scientific practices as well as aspects of how people are identifying with scientific
enterprises (Bell et al 2009). The objective for current attention towards the role of informal
contributors and environments for science learning, can be closely connected to the considerable body
of evidence that show how science is failing to engage young people (Jenkins & Nelson, 2005; Lyons,
2006; Osborne & Collins, 2001; Sjøberg & Schreiner, 2005). Derived from this, a central discussion
address how engagement with science is based on a cumulative process that crosses contested
institutional contexts of schooling, museum and everyday and-community based learning. A central
challenge in the field is to gain deeper understanding of the boundary crossing and bridging activities
between these social and institutional context and to develop a framework for designing learning
environments that support the heterogeneous aspects of science learning. Here, lies an implicit
argument about the need to change the pedagogical framework for science learning both in schools as
well as in science centers and museums.
Meanwhile, are new concepts of learning and knowledge challenging to implement in the
professional and institutional practices of museums and science centers. Well established issues of
museum education and perspectives on visitors learning, such as notions of free-choice learning and
learning across contexts (Falk 2001, Falk and Dierking 2000), do in several ways relate to changes
inside the field of broader educational thinking emergent in higher science education (Osborne and
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Hennessy 2003). The current highly debated transformation of museums and science centres is argued
to involve an overall change from presenting science in the form of objects, taxonomies and definite
truths, into a focus on how to enhance visitors’ active, open ended development of meaning and
reflective authorship (Quistgaard and Højland 2010, Macdonald 1998, Mintz 1995, Pedretti 2002 and
2004). This shift represents a major dilemma in the museum field, where the focus on object-based
museum learning has long been debated. Mainly in relation the role of the material object in relation
to visitors attention and the variety of forms that their construction of knowledge may take in learning
interaction with material object (Paris 2002). Meanwhile has it been argued that it is time to dethrone
objects from their traditional, privileged place as the center of attention in museum exhibition and
learning design. And instead shift the vision of exhibition design towards the practices that imbue
these objects with meaning in disciplinary communities (Schauble 2002). Objects may lie at the core
of the museum mission but requires that the theoretical claims posed to understand learning with
objects should be related closely to the particular sociocultural setting in question (Wertsch 2002)
The endeavour to build a new framework for learning in museums and science centre
involves to establish a focus on the blending of social and material learning features that comes at
play in museums and science centers learning interactions (e.g. Koch et al. 2011, Benjaminsen &
Sørensen 2011). And on finding new ways to support visitors critical reflection on science (Bandelli
2005) by way of the designed objects such as installations, multimedia presentations and digital and
physical interactives designed for museums and science centers. These new artifacts introduce
challenges that relates to navigation in exhibition space, embodied and physical experiences with
interactives as well as interpretations of representations and simulation that visitors has to understand
based on their interactions. Very often these interactive exhibits are designed to be stand-alone
teaching devices that must convey their message without the benefit of a human mediator (Feher,
1990). Interactive touching and manipulating in museums has been understood to open up ”a range of
experiences that fully engage visitors personally, physically and emotionally” (Adams, Luke and
Moussori 2004: 158), but needs to be explored more closely in relation to the didactic goal and
learning outcome of visitors interaction. Understanding the role of interactives in exhibits for science
learning and reflections on scientific questions is therefore crucial for understanding educational
efforts of science centers on a micro-level Achiam 2012).
Lately several studies have stated the short comings of the pedagogical outcome of science
exhibitions where students interaction with interactives has produced misconceptions (eg. Borun &
Adams 1991, Borun, Massey& Lutter 1993) The inclusion of digital media and learning technologies
in museum learning has put another layer on the articulated need to address exhibit design as well as
the design process as a didactic process leading towards an exhibition. One argument is that design of
interactives needs to be systematised to improve and optimize the fit between intended and observed
learning outcomes (Achiam 2012), and that curation and didactics of science may build helpful
frameworks. One proposal has been to consider the ways practitioners situate and use objects in their
work as illustrating didactic examples that may prompt learners in equal interactions in their learning
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(Bain and Ellenbogen 2002). This has for example inspired to a design based on praxeology of the
didactic involved in scientific reasoning (Achiam 2012) where moments of scientific reasoning build
the ground for designing learners interactions with interactives.
2.1 Background: The Norwegian context of EXPAND There are 8 regional science centres in Norway that receive governmental funding yearly under the
Science centre program. This arrangement started in 2003, when the Ministry of Education asked the
Norwegian Research Council to develop a strategy plan, which was named The Norwegian science
centre programme and which based based on developing regional science centres by way of operating
subsidy scheme. The objective behind this initiative was to raise interest among young people and
citizens towards science, current scientific questions and scientific education by way of the informal
and explorative learning opportunities given in these centres. This initiative has its background in the
overall Norwegian strategy for raising standards in math and science in the Norwegian educational
system (Soria Moria declaration).
The establishment of science centres in Norway has been based on a close collaboration
between industrial partners, regional governments and educational partners in joint efforts to promote
positive attitudes to science and mathematics among individuals in the educational sector and in the
community in general. The Norwegian Science Center programme consists of partly governmental
financing and partly individual support by each member organisation. Until 2012 The Norwegian
Science Center initiative has largely been used to build up the organisation, including new
construction for 6 new centres and to offer a diverse and exiting science centre program.The
programme plays an important role as governmental actor in professionalising science centres in
Norway and contributing to recruitment processes to science. In 2012 Norwegian science centers had
over 800.000 visitors as a result. This development has been driven by great engagement and high
collective spirit. The programme now enters its third programme period, and is facing the challenge of
the fact that 6 of 8 Norwegian science centres are relatively young institutions, all established after
year 2000.
2.2 The Norwegian strategy for raising standards in math and science The Expand-program should be seen as part of the Norwegian strategy for raising standards in math
and science. This strategy places emphasis on an intimate collaboration between mathematics and
science where the education and labour sectors also cooperate to bring about positive results. This
requires that new instruments and new areas of collaboration are developed that spans many levels of
education, from day care centres, primary and lower secondary schools, to teacher education and to
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improve the competence of teachers through continuing education in collaboration with universities
and colleges. The strategy has five overall goals, whereof Expand will connect to the last mentioned:
• To improve teaching of mathematics and science in day care centres and primary and lower
secondary school
• To improve the competence of teachers and teacher training
• To create development of mathematics and science subjects in higher education and research,
including the industry, business and labour sector.
• To reinforce expertise in mathematics and science in the labour sector
• To improve science communication with the general public
The current focus on learning impacts of Norwegian Science Centres relates to the overall strategy
articulated in the last primary goal of science communication. Science centers represent out-of-school
learning arenas that are emergently considered important arenas for creating interest and desire to
study mathematics and science.
2.3 Evaluations of Norwegian Science Centre Expand builds on two major evaluations of The Norwegian Science Program: The Quin-report (Quin
2006) delivered a status report from the first period financed by the Norwegian Ministry of Education
and Research (UFD), and the second period was evaluated by (Persson, Ødegaard, Nielsen 2009)
financed by Research Council of Norway (RCN).
The Quin-report concludes that the sector needs to connect as a whole – and to develop an
evaluation framework against which the science centre output and impact can be compared. The
report proposes following focus for a broadened scope of science center programs:
• Raise standards, increase cooperation, ensure coherent delivery
• Build formal partnerships, and inter centre relationships
• Develop concepts for exhibitions and educational programmes
• Match science centre deliverables to government objectives
• Support evaluation and stimulate collaboration and innovation
• Focus on identity outcomes
• Identify school children’s role in science as citizens or as future scientists
• Identify inclusive strategy to reach people from all backgrounds
The evaluation from the second period of the science centre program (Persson, Ødegaard, Nielsen
2009) recommends that Norwegian Science Centres be stimulated to build their further development
upon qualitative perspectives and understanding of the impact of educational programs in science
centers, which as a result would provide continuity in the further development of the centers (Persson,
Ødegaard, Nielsen 2009). The report especially focuses on the role of competence development in
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accordance with the profile in each institution – and recommends that such competence building be
combined with exchange of best practices of teaching and experiences of students learning between
institutions. The commission especially recommends the science centres to develop evaluation
methods and criteria for:
• Societal relevance
• Use of available interactives in exhibitions in their pedagogical programmes and activities
• Coherence between the pedagogical programme in science centres and school curriculum
• A holistic framework for inquiry based science that supports visitors learning and interaction
with installations.
These evaluation results build the background of the EXPAND-program and has given central input
to the research design and methodological approach.
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3.0 Expand – focus, relevance to existing research & research
design
The three overall focus areas will be addressed by several projects involved in the Expand program:
How do science centres work as learning arenas? What role may science centres have for
strengthening mathematics, science and technology? How can arenas for reflection and professional
practice development be established and made sustainable? The projects will apply multiple
methodological approaches drawing on quantitative survey studies, mapping approaches, and
qualitative studies as well as participatory and user involvement methods inspired by action research
and design-based methods by focusing on involving staff and students in co-research processes. The
goal of the EXPAND research program is to achieve a deeper understanding of science centers as
learning arenas, their role for recruitment to science education and development of science literacy as
well as how further education of staff in science centers can best be developed. These issues are
central topics of the applied approach to research and development that Expand – Research in
Norwegian Science Centers represents.
The research design of the EXPAND-program is based on the three main focus areas and will
frame the projects that will apply a multiple qualitative and quantitative research approaches. Also,
the program involves educational projects that will be directed towards educators in science centers
and science center researchers in Norway today:
Fig 1. Illustration of the structure and projects of Expand – Research in Norwegian Science Centres
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The research planned in the Expand-program will follow the three focus area and will inform the
overall perspective applied in the program, understanding science learning as being based on an
ecology of educational sources and resources (Bell et al. 2009, Falk et al. 2012).
3.2 Goals and objectives The Expand-program will be based on major objectives and concerns that ranges from extending
research methodologies to addressing empirical findings related to the framework of educational role
of Norwegian science centers :
• To empirically study the relation between interactive exhibitions, experiments in science
laboratories’ curriculum and learning in the science center with specific focus on the context
for Norwegian science centers
• To apply participatory and practice-based methodologies inspired by action research
approaches into the context of science center research. This is based on including science
centre educators as well as students to study the exhibition as learning arena, and develop
visions of possible interventions.
The research will feed into establishing an arena for professional development that integrate research
on science centre learning with a broader network of professional actors. Expand will run a
Norwegian network of science center researchers and will be active in the Norwegian conference on
science center and museums, to facilitate exchange between researchers and science centre
practitioners, development of teacher educational modules and establishing national research
networks.
The research project will be centred at INSPIRIA science centre, which will serve as a central case for
our collaborative research approach, involving museum practitioners in developing methods for
observation of student learning in the exhibitions, and evaluating how the science centre pedagogy is
implemented in the didactics of educational programmes and exhibits at this specific centre. It is a
central objective for the project that the methods for observation and assessment developed will also
be transferable to other centres. The core project group involves two researchers, a PhD-candidate and
master students at the master degree programme at Teacher Education in Natural Sciences,
Norwegian University of Life Sciences in addition to museum professionals at INSPIRIA that will be
involved as research participants. In addition there is a potential to involve science educators from
science centers in Norway that attends a PhD-educational programme be involved as a major addition
to the core group.
3.3 Methodological approach
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There is an emerging interest among museums, science centres to explore participatory and
design-based research approaches to educational development in informal settings, and across
museum and school contexts. These methodological endeavours are related to an interest in further
development of practical based design experiments that has been used in the educational sciences,
inspired by psychological research traditions. The main approach in this methodological tradition is to
conduct formative and test-based research in real settings. More recently, new approaches to using
design experiments have been developed, approaches with less focus on formative interventions and
testing, and where the process of design possible future solutions and visions is framed as a
component of investigating process (Boling 2010). This emerging re-organisation of design
experiment methods in educational research is related to the range of strategies required to address the
social, economic and technical challenges of and changes in education today. This methodological
development supports emerging educational thinking in science centres that addresses methodological
development that may capture the cultural assumptions and belief systems that visitors bring with
them and that constitute their participation and activity in informal learning across contexts of science
centers and schools (Ash & Rahm 2012).
Overall, these collaborative, participatory and design-based research approaches include
educators, experts and researchers across institutions and disciplines, and have multiple outcomes on
empirical, methodological and theoretical levels. Earlier, hermeneutic research designs (Anderson
2012) and action research-based methods (Tal 2012) have been combined with ethnographical
approaches to science centre learning studies. These collaborative research approaches include
professional development as both process and outcome of the research, and teachers engaged may
improve their practice based on reflections on actions as part of research exploring learning and
teaching across contexts (Tal 2012). Developing theoretically and methodologically well grounded
research methods is essential to move beyond the case based studies of informal learning and
formative test based assessment of implementations of educational technologies. In this way
exploring innovations in learning may be grounded on the social and cultural processes, the tentions
and ongoing negotiation processes that frames learning across sites.
The Expand-program will be based on these emerging collaborative research approaches
based on applying user engagement methods (Rickinson, Sebba and Edwards 2011) to engage science
educators and students in teacher training program in research activities in collaboration with project
researchers. Increasing numbers of large-scale strategic research projects in the educational sciences
have at their centre notions of partnerships, collaborations and engagement of practitioners in research
projects (Rickinson, Sebba and Edwards 2011). Such practitioner involvement in research is well
known in action research approaches in organisations (Lewin 1946). In addition, Expand will involve
students and young people in Youth Participatory Action Research stemming from Freire’s critical
pedagogy and participatory approaches to social science (Freire 1970, Cammarota & Fine 2008).
There have been only few projects in the museum and science centre field that explore participatory
approach and action research methods, and these have focused user engagement in the form of
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visitors’ engagement into designing new exhibitions, involving children and youth in participatory
research related to designing interactions and technologies (Taxén 2004, Dindler & Iversen 2007,
Iversen and Smith 2012).
Related to the focus on interactions in exhibitions and the focus on understanding the relation
between visitors interactions and didactic outcome of installations, will Expand take inspirations of
approaches, techniques and tools from participatory research methods from the diverging fields such
as participatory design and co-design, and address their relevance to learning in sciences centers. This
user engagement and participatory approach is based on the project focus on engaging science
educators, students from masters level teacher education as well as youth in upper secondary classes
in collaborative research in developing concepts and perspectives that help understanding interactive
learning processes in science centre exhibitions. This triangulation of research, education and
practical development and innovation in science centres does represent a new research strategy
compared to other known science centre projects and will be one of the main contributions of Expand
to the STEM field.
3.4 Research Design and research projects The research design is overall based on an ecological approach to understanding science learning
(Falk et al.2012, Bell et al.2009). The three focus areas of Expand are chosen as distinct arenas
relevant as research that takes up the needs for further development stated in the evaluations of
Norwegian Science Center (Quin 2006, Persson et al 2009). The participatory action research
methodology will be applied in multiple ways in all three arena Science centers as learning arenas,
Science centers as recruitment arenas, and Development of reflective practices based on different
forms of involvement of science educators and students in science programmes
I. Focus area: Science centers as learning arenas This focus area seeks to respond to the following overall problem area in science center research:
How do science centres work as learning arenas?
The focus area includes a special focus on the exhibition as one arena, and
Currently, this focus area includes two sub-projects:
A) Interactions in exhibitions: The exhibition is the physical interface for learning in science centres, as it is where interactions take
place, both material interaction with objects, interactives and digital technologies, and social
interaction with other individuals. Several studies have concluded that interactive exhibits tend to
attract more visitors and engage them for longer times than static exhibits (e.g. Allen 2007; Brooks &
Vernon 1956, Borun 2003, Korn 1997, Rosenfeld & Terkel 1982, Serrell 2001). At the same time
studies have also documented that exhibit designs that incorporated too many interactive features
could lead to misunderstandings and visitors feeling overwhelmed (Allen & Gutwill 2004). Several
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studies show how exhibitions often fail to support students in reflective thinking, to facilitate
understanding of explanations and theories and even result in retaining misconceptions about
scientific phenomena (Land 2000, Achiam 2012). More specifically, do studies of interactive exhibits
show that in some cases they actually seemed to teach misconceptions (Borun, Masey and Lutter
1993), and in other cases that visitors constructed unexpected knowledge, which was not in
accordance with canonical science (Anderson, Lucas, Gins & Dierking 2000, Achiam 2012). Studying
interactions in museum exhibitions and in relation to particular exhibits is important, in order to
advance exhibition design and design of interactives. In order to improve exhibition design in science
centers there is a need to develop a didactic and systematic framework for analyzing and designing
learning interactions with interactive installations in exhibition spaces. Also, there is a need for a
shared vocabulary or terminology to articulate the relations between the designed features of
interactives, the learners interactions and learning outcomes (e.g. what kinds of design features may
support particular learning outcomes) (Mortensen 2011). Also there is a need to develop a framework
for how design processes can be planned and managed in accordance with didactic goals and needs.
This to develop design principles that help secure coherence between designed interactions and
learning outcomes in the exhibition. For the focus on the role of the exhibition in establishing science
centres as learning arenas for science literacy, it is important to note that; “Exhibits that do not
provide learners with the means to construct the intended scientific understanding lack what for most
museums is a fundamental characteristic” (Achiam 2012: 2).
There is a growing body of research literature on the role of digital technologies in museum
exhibitions, which comes primarily from media studies and interaction design studies (Drotner and
Laursen, 2011; Parry, 2010; Tallon and Walker, 2008). This literature discusses the possibilities and
limitations of these technologies for exhibition design in museums and science centres. While curators
see digital technologies as being part of the contemporary language of the mass media that museums
must speak if they are to be able to communicate with young adults, there is a clear need to address
the meditational means that digital technologies introduce to the exhibition space (Witcomb 2008,
Adams et al 2004). Learning in science centres is increasingly related to the everyday activities of
youth outside institutional settings. Here, focus is put on the engagement that youth have with digital
media due to their social and cultural practices with technology. This gives them new forms of
competencies, abilities to relate to and involve diverging representational practices into their learning,
sensibilities towards properties of media, expertise of strategy and ownership that comes in new
shapes and modes and that is built on cumulative processes of learning across sites and contexts
(Erstad & Sefton-Green 2013).
The focus on processes of learning across context give a conception of learning as capabilities
and capacities to connect knowledge from different contexts and across multiple forms of materiality
(Arnseth & Silseth 2013). This gives young people a digital fluency (Hsi 2003&2007), where
practices of “messing around” (Ito et al. 2010) may be understood as one of several modes of
learning. There is a need to conceptualise learning in exhibitions as deeply related to these emerging
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learning practices (Stuedahl & Smørdal 2011). The relation between existing practices and learning
in the museum exhibition is a field that still is rather unexplored when it comes to understanding the
role of digital technologies – and how these technologies may open up possibilities but also add
limitations. Science centre and museum learning experiences in exhibitions may for example be
deeply related to other museum media such as websites, mobile services and outreach programmes.
What has been studied from interaction design and studies of digital mediation of learning, has been
focused on how digital technologies do introduce new forms of interaction and participation in
museums and science center exhibitions (Heath and vom Lehn, 2004; vom Lehn et al., 2001, Stuedahl
& Smørdal 2011 a og b, Jahreie et al. 2011, Pierroux et al 2011, Laursen 2012). But we still have a
limited understanding of what kind of learning and production of meaning the multiple forms of
interactives in museums may lead to.
The sub-projects involved in this focus area are designed to explore the gap between
exhibition design and the design of learning activities in Norwegian science center exhibitions.
Included in the focus on object-based learning and its sociocultural context, Expand focuses on how
digital technologies and interactives are part of the media ecology that are involved in visitors science
learning. The interactions will be conceptualised as intertwining the material, the technical with social
and spatial based interactions and meaning making, where non-digital interactives and objects are
aligned with digital in the learning experience of the visitor. One main emphasis will be to explore
how digital is framed in relation to non-digital interactions in the educational and didactic thinking of
science centre learning programmes. The foci of Expand will be to involve science centre educators in
exploring methods for how to observe and evaluate interactions in exhibitions that goes beyond
established methods of front end and formative exhibition evaluations. The collaboration with science
centre educators will focus upon suitable methods for gathering data about students’ and visitors’
learning in science centre exhibitions, and that can be integrated into practices of educational
departments at science centres in a sustainable way.
SUB-‐Project ANALYSING INTERACTION: This sub-project builds on the overall goal of applying
participatory research methods by involving science educators in the endeavour to observe and
analyse exhibitions in their own institutions with a special focus on the relation between educational
goals, design features and potential possibilities of future design processes. Science center educators
will be involved as co-researchers, as part of their participation in a continual professional
development programme developed by Expand as part of the participatory research approach. The
first module of the CPD program will have a special focus on methods and analytical frameworks for
understanding learning interactions in exhibitions. During the module will science center educators
document and collect empirical material of learning activities and interactions in exhibition spaces,
including objects and diverse interactives, technical and non-technical, in their institution. The
empirical material will be analysed in collaboration with science educators.
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B) Bridging school and museum collaborations: The Expand research project aims to address the
relation between students science learning in school versus in museums and science centers. The
overall goal is to explore what forms of learning science centers can provide, that learning in the
classroom can not (Frøyland 2010). Expand will also explore methodologies for examining the impact
of school trips on teaching and learning. Three key aspects of school field trips to museums and
science centres have been in focus of international research :
• The overall educational value of the trips • The impact of preparing for and following up on field trips
• The complexity of elements that influence students’ learning during field trips.
Much field trip related research in the 1970s, 1980s and 1990s contrasted out-of-school learning
opportunities with in-school instruction (DeWitt & Storksdieck 2008). Lately, however, museum
practitioners and classroom teachers have come to place more value on the positive affective and
social experiences afforded by field trips (Anderson, Kisiel, & Storksdieck, 2006; Storksdieck,
Werner, & Kaul, 2006). In addition “cognitive” learning outcomes of field trips are emergently being
defined to go beyond learning facts and concepts, to include process skills, awareness of lifelong
learning and museums’ collaboration with communities (Storksdieck, Robbins, & Kreisman, 2007,
DeWitt & Storksdieck 2008). Hence, learning on and from a field trip is no longer seen as simply an
extension or improvement of classroom teaching, but as a valuable supplement and addition to
classroom instruction (Hofstein & Rosenfeld, 1996; Orion & Hofstein, 1994; Storksdieck, 2006;
DeWitt & Storksdieck, 2008, Frøyland 2010).
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Research indicates that the learning connected to field trips is fundamentally influenced by
the design of the field trip, including the structure of the field trip itself, prior knowledge of the
students, the social context of the visit, teacher agendas and actions on the field trip, and the presence
or absence and quality of preparation and follow-up experiences (DeWitt & Storksdieck 2008).
Research into school field trips to science centres also states the importance of a clear learning
framework for the visit, a clear indication of how the information is to be used following the visit and
an understandable purpose of the learning (Griffin 1998), as well as providing students with some
authority or control over their learning (Griffin 2004).
Studies of museum educators` perspectives on science educational programs have identified
five elements that influence school student learning in museums. Educators’ concerns are related to
what happens in school before and after field visits, the pre and post-visit work, which contextualizes
the trip; and provides “a) alignment with accepted science curriculum standards and benchmarks; b)
extension of all contacts through pre-and post-activity connections; c) integration with other subjects
and disciplines; d) connection of classroom experience to science centre experience; and e) insistence
on student production through problem solving, construction, collaboration, and use of creativity”
(Lebeau et al. 2001:134).
In a Norwegian context the research project “Museum and school” 2006 – 2009 established
collaborative efforts between museum educators, teachers and Oslo and Akershus University College
(Frøyland & Langholm 2009, 2010), with the goal of exploring the didactic possibilities in Norwegian
educational white papers for design of new educational activities for school field trips to science
centres (Frøyland, 2010). The Museum and school project was based on applying several methods and
was followed by a course for participants in the project, and found that the main challenge for science
centre educators was to design meaningful assignments for students. Another challenge was to engage
teachers in planning for pre- and post activities related to visits (Frøyland & Langholm 2009). The
project implemented a collaborative approach, where museum educator and teacher jointly developed
the learning program for the school’s field trip. The results from this approach were that students
became more engaged, teachers participated more in the field trip and the learning program had a
stronger focus on the unique character of museums as learning arenas (Frøyland og Langholm, 2010).
Expand will build on experiences from these research projects, and will involve an iterative
approach informed by the traditions of design based research and design experiments in educational
research by involving science educators, where the premise of the research approach is that
understanding how people learn depends on being able to study processes of learning and teaching in
real life environments and across institutional contexts. This approach, where the research proceeds in
cycles, has been advocated as an alternative to formative research in museums and science centres
(Schauble, Leinhardt and Martin 1997).
SUB-‐PROJECT: BRIDGING THE GAP BETWEEN SCIENCE CENTERS AND SCHOOLS This PhD-project takes departure in that science centers have their own view and intention on what to
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teach and how to teach the science subject. The transformation in the last decade of museums and
science centers mentioned above, to change from presenting science in the form of objects,
taxonomies and definite truths, is questioned in its uniqueness. Is this new transformation in museums
and science centers unique in the context of the ongoing transformation of science learning in other
arenas like schools, media and science based organizations? In a school setting, open ended
development of meaning and science controversies in modern democracies are topics that have highly
influenced the transformation of the national science curriculum. This challenges the definition of
science centers as unique learning arenas. The phd will be based on ethnographic analysis of learning
activities in one science center and asks: What are the unique aspects about science centers as learning
arenas? How do the programs offered to schools support science learning?
II. Focus area: The impact of science centers for science engagement In a recent review of the UK informal science learning community funded by the Wellcome Trust
express that despite the notable evidence of extensive learning taking place outside formal education
there is still a need for evidence that informal science has a lasting impact on peoples engagement
with science (Wellcome Trust 2012). The review states that the informal science learning field “lacks
robust measures of child or adult interest, has little understanding of how it can contribute to
sustaining or developing an enduring interest in science” (Falk et al 2012). Further, the report states
the need to develop measures that build on sets of questions that involves the sociocultural aspects
involved in the impact of science center. Rather than asking what individuals have learned, the report
recommend to ask questions related to how given experience did contribute to stimulating or
sustaining learner interest and engagement. As a conclusion the review states that more research is
needed on long-term impact and the identifying factors that influence people to move into scientific
careers (Falk et al.2012)
Studies of impact of museum and science centre learning are challenging, as there are a variety of
definitions of learning outcomes, there is a need for methodological development and measuring
categories. It seems that to build compelling evidence for learning from museums has proved
challenging; “This is not because the evidence did not exist, but rather because museum learning
researchers, museum professionals, and the public alike historically asked the wrong questions and
searched for evidence of learning using flawed methodologies.” (Falk & Dierking 2000).
The science center impact study initiated by ASTC and ECSITE has developed an overall
model based on articulated needs for a consistent framework for measuring the broader impact of
science centers. This is based on a focus on four types of impact; economic impact, political impact,
societal impact and learning impact (Persson 2000). The learning impact includes following aspects:
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• Changed attitudes to science
• Social nature of the experience
• Career-related decisions
• Increased professional expertise in science center and schools
• Personal enjoyment
Some of the same aspects can be found in the research literature; Longterm learning impact as a result
of visits to science centers has been approached by studying how visitors memorize visits to science
exhibitions (Spoch 2000, Anderson 2003, Falk et al. 2007, Rennie 2007) and in relation to visitors
increase of knowledge related to a visit (Falk et al 2004). Learning impact has also been studied based
on change of attitudes and change of behavior (Adelman, Falk & James 2000 Jarvis & Pell 2005) and
in relation to its effect on the image of science (Rennie & Williams 2000).
Less studies has been carried out into the long-term learning impact of science center, due to the
practical methodological challenges of maintaining contact with samples of visitors over years, but
also due to difficulties in proving causation (ECSITE 2008). The studies that have been conducted
propose conflicting conclusions. For example, a Norwegian survey of career choices among
firstsemester students in science at universities and university college show that 20% of the students
report visits to science centers as a main inspiration for their career (Schreiner et al, 2010). Visits to
science centers were also reported as more important for their career choices than careers advice in
schools or public relation campaigns (Schreiner et al. 2010). On the other hand studies have shown
that youth visiting science centers find exhibitions exiting, but do not think that they had great
learning outcomes of them (Quistgaard 2006). Also, that youths miss exhibitions that open to multiple
answers, that take their opinion as visitors serious and that open for collective and dialogical
discussions with their peers (Fors 2006).
According to Braund and Reiss (2006) do youth rate learning in science centers as highly engaging,
and they range Science centers as nr. 5 related to their experience of outcome of the learning. 94% of
482 Canadian university students say that visits to science centers or museums have increased their
interest for science and technology (The Strategic Counsel 2008). In other words, there is some
evidence that science centers may have some influence on youths’ career choices. But we need to
study these relations closer to determine what the nature of these experiences need to be to maximize
the influence that they may have on career aspirations.
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Based on this body of research will this focus area of Expand seek to meet with the requirement of the
Norwegian strategy for raising standards in math an science as well as the recommendation of
evaluation of Norwegian science centers to study how science centers improve science
communication with the general public, and how science centers help school children and citizens to
identify as engaged in science and see potential in being a future scientist.
SUB-‐PROJECTS: To include these aspects of long-term impact of science centers will Expand address
the overall research question: What impact do science centres have for the strategy for strengthening
mathematics, science and technology? The focus area will consist of two sub-projects, one
quantitative international study and one qualitative and participatory project which includes youth in
an attempt to articulate central issues of longitudinal aspects of learning and engagement with science.
a) International Science Center Impact Study Expand will participate in an international quantitative study, the International Science Centre Impact
Study 2012 - 2013, lead by John Falk, Lynn Dierking and Mark Needham. This study takes an
epidemiological approach to of the issue of learning in science centres. It is a quantitative study,
involving variables chosen in relation to the complex and cumulative nature of science learning.
Public experiences at science centres improve knowledge and understanding of science, and increase
interest in and engagement with science. This quantitative study is based on self reporting methods of
learning, and has the goal to capture visitors articulations of the full extent, breadth, and depth of
visitor knowledge and understanding of science as a result of experiences in science centers as part of
an ecology of science learning in a broader perspective (Falk and Storksdieck 2005, 2010).
Traditional school-type pre-and post-test research models have delivered notoriously inaccurate
measures of learning in free-choice settings (e.g., Falk & Dierking, 2000). Consequently, the
International Science Centre Impact Study arguably attempts to provide a more appropriate model to
understand the “contributions” that informal experiences make to learning (e.g., Falk & Needham,
2011). The proposed international investigation will begin to analyse the impact of science centres by
determining the relative contributions that specific independent variables related to actual science
centre experiences have on a range of desirable long-term dependent variables and characteristics of
the public such as science understanding, attitudes, and behaviours (International Impact Research
Proposal).
b) Participatory youth action research on science engagement Expand will implement a methodological alternative approach to studies of youth`s
engagement in science. This, by applying youth participatory action research methods (Cammarota &
Fine 2008). The goal is to achieve a better understanding of the complexity of the development of
aspirations by adopting and drawing on the perspective of young people. The approach will apply a
practice based approach involving multiple design based research methods that are adapted to the
specific group of youth researchers involved. Youth Participatory Research of Science Engagement is
19
a participatory youth action research project established as in collaboration with Inspiria Science
center and Greåker high school. The project will involve science centre educators and students of
upper secondary science program to explore science literacy and relevance to youth social and
cultural practices of today. The participating students will explore 6 aspects of science centre
learning; the exhibition, the content of curricula, the communication between science centres and
youth, content of science centre events, and the form and content of science centre architecture and
exhibition design. This sub-project will use youth participatory research as a method to gain insights
into the motivations, interests and elements of science center experiences that best facilitate
engagement with science from a youth perspective. As an outcome of this subproject we expect
empirical material that could be compared with the empirical material from science educators
observation and analysis of exhibitions to be able to answer questions related to the social and the
material aspects of learning and engagement with science in science centers.
III. Focus area: Development of reflective practices This track will have as its objective to address the research question: How can arenas for reflection and professional practice development be established and how can they be made sustainable? This focus area has development of reflective practices and sharing of research results, outcomes and
experiences as its central concern. Thereby establish several arenas where knowledge can be
exchanged between researchers and educational departments in the eight Norwegian science centres
that are connected to the Expand project. The development of Reflective Practice Arenas are an
important initiative as part of the participatory research methodology chosen for Expand, and serve as
a means to involve a broader community of science centre educators in discussions of research
activities and outcomes of the EXPAND-program.
The CPD-program is understood as part of the process of building this reflective practices arena.
Participants in the CPD-program will meet with other science educators and in collaboration use
existing research to build analytical frameworks that are practically manageable for observations and
evaluations in their institutional practices. To support science centre educators capacity to engage in
the project as co-researchers all are Science Centers invited to involve at least 2 of their employees in
the CPD-program. The modules in the modules in the CPD-program will each last over the time span
of a year. Three modules are planned during the first period of the Expand program. The smaller
groups of participants in the CPD program will also attend the events that Expand arranges for
building a larger community among science educators.
The Reflective Practice Arenas contains both educational efforts of professional development with a
close relation to science center research, community-building efforts that focuses upon knowledge
exchange between researchers engaging in science center research in Norway. And also to arrange
event where research outcomes can be discussed and debated in the broader community of
practitioners in science center education. This effort to build an arena that links research and practice
20
has the goal to build Reflective Practice Arena that involves several communities into discussions,
knowledge exchange and reflection upon outcome of the research activities in the sub-projects, as
well as on empirical findings.
This focus area therefore has a broad approach, and contains research activities as an integrated part
of integrated competence building, such as for example in the CPD-module. Also, practical
investments towards building a broader community. As part of the community-building aspect will
this focus area involve several practical actions listed below, where science educators are involved in
performing quantitative survey, a bi-annual conference established in 2012 and a national network of
researcher on science center learning.
Research-‐project: a) Improving research by science educators participation. On a research level this focus area
will study how action research approaches can be applied to involve science center educators in
developing a consistent methodologies. The development of the CPD-modules is understood as part
of research design related to this methodological interest, and is defined as a subproject below. The
research related to participatory research performed in collaboration with science educators in the
CPD-module will explore how participatory methodologies can be used in the context of science
learning research. The CPD-program is part of a strategy for engaging science practitioners in
research, and an arena for capacity-building of ideas and understanding of implications (Rickinson,
Sebba & Edwards 2012) for both researchers and practitioners. The research sub-project is closely
intertwined with research outcomes from the Youth participation project described above. As both
groups; science center practitioners and youths are defined as practitioners and experts in the
everyday life of science learning and engagement. In this way, this subproject will study how we
methodologically can develop a research-based approach to lifelong learning, and to explore how
science centers can build a link between general youth development and education (see e.g. Koke &
Dierking 2007, Zipsane 2007).
The CPD-modules will be based on 4 workshops over the time span of one year. The module
will end with the participants writing an essay based on the work with methods they have learned
from the workshops. The workshops will involve real-life, practical exercises where participants will
have the experience of conducting observational methods and techniques in the exhibition where the
workshop will be arranged, together with course participants and to thereafter get practical experience
with design based experiments related to their own science centers exhibits. During the workshops
will science educators will be involved in experimental and practical sessions to get experience with
diverging methods of documentation and observation of interactions in the exhibition. Different
observational methods and methods for studying visitors interactions and learning with exhibits and
installations will collaboratively be investigated in relation to evaluation needs and local conditions at
the science centre in question. Between the workshops will the course-participants explore the
methods in their own center and report empirical material and experiences with the methods back to
21
the course groups. This empirical material will be defined as research material for Expand. The CPD-
modules will give 15 ECTS credits and. Participants in the CPD-modules are automatically
participates in the research activities of EXPAND.
The CPD will at the same time have the goal of exploring possible models for collaboration and inter
centre relationships as part of the Reflective Practice Arena focus, and will stimulate opportunities for
joint regional workshops that address local needs. Where possible, the workshops would also involve
teachers on a local level.
Sub-‐project: Developing systems for shared evaluation frameworks across regional science centers Earlier evaluation of Norwegian science center learning has identified the need for a shared
methodological framework to evaluate science center exhibitions as well as their activities with
schools We envision that this development will build on results from the International Impact study
and will lead to a framework for self-evaluation that may be shared by the 8 national science centers.
Sub-project: A network for science center researchers.
The network was established spring 2013, and plan to arrange yearly meetings. The meetings will
contain research presentations by participants, presentation of work with students in the field,
presentation and joint analysis of empirical material from Expand. The network will be important
support for research on science centre education in Norway, and will also be an important arena for
collaboration, joint project development and development of research proposals and discussions of
research results and findings in the research field of science center education.
Sub-project: A National conference on science center and museums
The Norwegian conference on learning in science centers and museums was established in 2012 with
in collaboration with Vil Vite, University of Bergen, The Research Council of Norway and
Norwegian Centre for Science Education, and was held in Bergen 2012-09.06 – 07. This conference
will continue to be held bi-annually, rotating among locations and involving practitioners and
researchers on a national level.
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