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Cyberchase: Mobile Adventures in STEM

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STEM knowledge enriches our experiences of the natural and social worlds. Providing children with early opportunities to interact with STEM, through playful and creative activities, can increase their chances of developing positive associations and dispositions toward STEM and lay foundations for lifelong knowledge and capabilities. Yet not all children have access to rich early STEM learning.

The WNET group and EDC are advancing the STEM learning of early elementary children of Latinx and low-income families through Cyberchase: Mobile Adventures in STEM. The project combines the popular animated TV series Cyberchase with the potential of mobile texting to engage families in environmental science and math activities.

The project is carrying out the following activities:

  • Create new Cyberchase videos focused on using math to learn about the environment; ensure videos are culturally responsive and based on a strengths-based view of learners and communities
  • Research target audience needs and interests
  • Conduct a bilingual family learning program in 15 communities, in which parents receive weekly texts combining this media with related STEM activities
  • Study the impact of the approach in producing informal STEM interactions
  • The new Cyberchase videos will build the math and environmental literacy of millions of young girls and boys.
  • The family learning program will engage families in 15 diverse communities across the country in fun and productive STEM experiences.
  • The project will provide insight into how media-supported family learning activities delivered to parents’ phones via text messages can foster engagement in STEM learning among low-income children and parents.

Bill Tally, a national leader in instructional design, advances knowledge of innovative learning environments and experiences. His work as a senior investigator specializing in R&D, educational media, and evaluation is deepening the field’s understanding of how digital tools can make learning more rigorous, meaningful, and engaging.

Noah Goodman’s expertise in design-based research and evaluation advances the development and improvement of programs, tools, and materials that enhance learning in diverse settings. He is particularly interested in inquiry and evidence-based argumentation and in helping students develop approaches they can use to investigate and learn from their social world.

National Science Foundation

The WNET Group

2020–Present

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