This article examines how scientists, classroom teachers, poetry educators, and youth negotiated the domains of science through their engagement in a two-year Massive Open Online Collaboration (MOOC) funded by the National Science Foundation. To make sense of learners\u27 unconventional and interdisciplinary writing and the cultural and disciplinary conflicts that emerged around it, I offer a reframing of science literacy as a series of crash encounters. Such a reframing prompts literacy practitioners to anticipate fallout when diverse bodies, objects, and rhetorics collide and, therefore, to better design and participate in interdisciplinary networks to create more dynamic and vibrant approaches to science literacy
This paper examines the MOVING MOOC “Science 2.0 and open research methods”, an online course for op...
Reading and writing stories with science-related themes make it possible for students to develop int...
International assessments of student science achievement, and growing evidence of students' waning i...
This article examines how scientists, classroom teachers, poetry educators, and youth negotiated the...
Scientific understanding is often settled within a discipline before it reaches a broader social und...
MOOCs (Massive Online Open Courses) are gradually capturing the public imagination. From experimenta...
For many students the study of Science can be very disaffirming. This may lead to passivity in class...
International assessments of student science achievement, and growing evidence of students' waning i...
As the narratives that guide higher education fracture and realign, the topic of massive open online...
This research is concerned with authentic science writing, and in particular, investigating collabor...
The development of scientifically literate citizens remains an important priority of science educati...
The paper emphasises processes of growing understanding and reasoning about water-related phenomena ...
Researchers working in the intersection of literacy and science education have increasingly acknowle...
*This is a draft copy of a paper accepted to be published in the Journal Interactive Learning Envir...
The development of scientifically literate citizens remains an important priority of science educati...
This paper examines the MOVING MOOC “Science 2.0 and open research methods”, an online course for op...
Reading and writing stories with science-related themes make it possible for students to develop int...
International assessments of student science achievement, and growing evidence of students' waning i...
This article examines how scientists, classroom teachers, poetry educators, and youth negotiated the...
Scientific understanding is often settled within a discipline before it reaches a broader social und...
MOOCs (Massive Online Open Courses) are gradually capturing the public imagination. From experimenta...
For many students the study of Science can be very disaffirming. This may lead to passivity in class...
International assessments of student science achievement, and growing evidence of students' waning i...
As the narratives that guide higher education fracture and realign, the topic of massive open online...
This research is concerned with authentic science writing, and in particular, investigating collabor...
The development of scientifically literate citizens remains an important priority of science educati...
The paper emphasises processes of growing understanding and reasoning about water-related phenomena ...
Researchers working in the intersection of literacy and science education have increasingly acknowle...
*This is a draft copy of a paper accepted to be published in the Journal Interactive Learning Envir...
The development of scientifically literate citizens remains an important priority of science educati...
This paper examines the MOVING MOOC “Science 2.0 and open research methods”, an online course for op...
Reading and writing stories with science-related themes make it possible for students to develop int...
International assessments of student science achievement, and growing evidence of students' waning i...