BUFFALO, N.Y. -- A program that's bringing Android apps and
miniature racecars into science classrooms in Buffalo schools is
the latest subject of Bus 52, a national documentary project that
is traveling across America to film people who are confronting
community challenges in inventive ways.
Bus 52 team members visited Buffalo's Burgard High School in
November to learn about the Interdisciplinary Science and
Engineering Partnership (ISEP), a program that's reshaping science
education in the Buffalo Public Schools. A short film that Bus 52
produced during this visit is available at http://web.bus52.com/profiles/interdisciplinary-science-engineering-partnership.
ISEP aims to improve science education by giving teachers the
tools they need to engage students in the kinds of
interdisciplinary, hands-on learning experiences that make science
exciting. Through ISEP, about 60 science, technology, engineering
and mathematics (STEM) teachers in 12 Buffalo middle and high
schools receive the following services each year:
-- The chance to immerse themselves in hands-on science by
conducting summer research with local scientists, or taking a
teacher preparation course emphasizing hands-on instruction.
-- A network of educators and science professionals who offer
feedback as teachers design new curricula centered on student
engagement and interdisciplinary, hands-on learning. Teachers in
ISEP engage students in a wide range of projects, from programming
Android apps to engineering and racing miniature wooden cars.
-- Regular assistance in the classroom and after school from
corporate scientists and University at Buffalo graduate students in
STEM fields.
Ideally, students in ISEP classrooms are not passive observers,
but curious young investigators engaged in exciting science. As
Joseph Gardella, the UB chemistry professor who coordinates the
program, told Bus 52, "Doing science isn't showing up at a
classroom and listening to a lecture and filling in a sheet of
paper. Doing science involves doing creative work. It involves
making decisions."
Gardella, UB John and Frances Larkin Professor of Chemistry,
leads ISEP in partnership with the Buffalo Public Schools, the
Buffalo Museum of Science and Buffalo State College. The program's
primary funding comes from a $9.8 million National Science
Foundation grant.
Robert Gelb, Bus 52 coordinator, said he and his team thought
ISEP was a "special story because of the innovation in not only
expanding science education in Buffalo schools, but also providing
a mentoring opportunity that integrates current (UB) grad students
into the classroom."
Bus 52 is a year-long project. The team travels around the
United States, filming videos about people from every circumstance
who are confronting important community challenges. The stories are
presented as a patchwork of U.S. community innovation, with the
goal of spurring viewers to get involved in their own
communities.