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Peer-reviewed article

Distributed Expertise in a Science Center

May 1, 2008 | Public Programs, Exhibitions
This research project examines the way that children and parents talk about science outside of school and, specifically, how they show distributed expertise about biological topics during visits to a science center. We adopt a theoretical framework that looks at learning on three interweaving planes: individual, social, and cultural (tools, language, worldviews, and artifacts). We analyze conversations to study how these three planes show learning processes as families work together to create explanations of biological phenomena. Findings include: (a) children and parents made epistemic moves that led to different social and intellectual roles in the conversations (skeptic, expert, memory-prompter), sometimes based on prior involvement in science activities; and (b) during extended scientific explanations about life science content, expertise in science was distributed across the family members and the museum environment so that the parents and children were both contributing to the conversation.

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  • 2013 06 19 Heather Zimmerman pix Oct2008
    Author
    Pennsylvania State University
  • Suzanne Reeve
    Author
  • Bell March2016 headshot
    Author
  • Citation

    Publication Name: Journal of Museum Education
    Volume: 33
    Number: 2
    Page Number: 143
    Resource Type: Research Products
    Discipline: Education and learning science | General STEM | Life science
    Audience: Elementary School Children (6-10) | Pre-K Children (0-5) | Families | Parents/Caregivers | Museum/ISE Professionals
    Environment Type: Public Programs | Museum and Science Center Programs | Exhibitions | Museum and Science Center Exhibits

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