PA14A-03:
Cool Science: Year 2 of Using Children's Artwork about Climate Change to Engage Riders on Mass Transit

Monday, 15 December 2014: 4:30 PM
David Scott Lustick1, Jill Lohmeier1 and Robert F Chen2, (1)University of Massachusetts Lowell, Education, Lowell, MA, United States, (2)University of Massachusetts Boston, Boston, MA, United States
Abstract:
A team of educators and scientists from the University of Massachusetts Lowell and the University of Massachusetts Boston will report on the second year of an informal science learning research project using mass transit spaces in Lowell, MA. Cool Science (CS) conducts a statewide art competition for K-12 students in the fall challenging them to express climate science understanding through the visual arts. An inter-disciplinary panel of judges evaluates entries and identifies the top 24 works of art. The best six student works of art are then put on public display throughout the spring on the Lowell Regional Transit Authority (LRTA). Displaying student artwork in Out of Home Multi-Media (OHMM) such as bus placards and posters is intended to engage riders with opportunities to learn informally. CS aims to promote and evaluate learning about climate change science among the general public and k-12 students/teachers.

The goals of CS are:

1) Engage teachers, students, and parents in a climate change science communication competition.

2) Display the winning 6 artworks from K-12 students throughout the LRTA.

3) Assess the impact of Cool Science on the teaching and learning of climate science in K-12 formal education.

4) Assess the impact of Cool Science artwork on attitudes, awareness, and understanding of climate change among adult bus riders.

A naturalistic inquiry employing a mixed methodology approach best describes our research design. The evaluation focuses on providing feedback regarding the potential learning outcomes for the K-12 students who create the media for the project and the general riding public who engage with the student artwork. To identify possible outcomes, data was collected in the several forms: survey, interviews, and online analytics.

We see an urgent need to improve both the public’s engagement with climate change science and to the profile of climate change science in formal education settings. The Cool Science (CS) project is an opportunity to bring formal and informal science learning settings together for mutual engagement in the science of climate change. The research that will be presented should be of interest to both informal and formal science educators, art and science educators, and environmental education advocates.