Ca. Korpan et al., WHAT DID YOU LEARN OUTSIDE OF SCHOOL TODAY - USING STRUCTURED INTERVIEWS TO DOCUMENT HOME AND COMMUNITY ACTIVITIES RELATED TO SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY, Science education, 81(6), 1997, pp. 651-662
An important but underrepresented element in the growing body of work
on informal science education is research designed to examine the natu
re and scope of children's science-related activities outside of schoo
l. We have begun to study children's activities related to science, na
ture, and technology by developing structured interviews for parents o
f middle class preschool and kindergarten children and for students in
upper-elementary grades. These interviews can be used to construct pr
ofiles of children's exposure to science activities outside of school,
such as watching television, reading, attending exhibits or events at
community facilities, participating in experiments or demonstrations
at home, and asking questions of parents. We describe how these interv
iews were developed, what kinds of information this type of research e
nabled us to obtain, and what lessons we have learned in the process.
The level of extracurricular participation reported in a wide range of
science-related activities was very high. Structured interviews can h
elp teachers gain information about students' exposure to science-rela
ted learning activities in their home and community. This information
can be used as a platform on which classroom instruction can be built.
(C) 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.