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Peer-reviewed article

We Be Burnin'! Agency, Identity and Science Learning

April 1, 2010 | Public Programs
This article investigates the development of agency in science among low-income urban youth aged 10 to 14 as they participated in a voluntary year-round program on green energy technologies conducted at a local community club in a midwestern city. Focusing on how youth engaged a summer unit on understanding and modeling the relationship between energy use and the health of the urban environment, we use ethnographic data to discuss how the youth asserted themselves as community science experts in ways that took up and broke down the contradictory roles of being a producer and a critic of science/education. Our findings suggest that youth actively appropriate project activities and tools in order to challenge the types of roles and student voice traditionally available to students in the classroom. We Be Burnin'!

TEAM MEMBERS

  • 2014 11 19 Calabrese Barton Angela 2014
    Author
    Michigan State University
  • Edna Tan
    Author
    Michigan State University
  • Citation

    DOI : 10.1080/10508400903530044
    Publication Name: Journal of the Learning Sciences
    Volume: 19
    Number: 2
    Page Number: 187-229

    Funders

    NSF
    Funding Program: ITEST
    Award Number: 0737642
    Resource Type: Research Products
    Discipline: Computing and information science | Engineering | Technology
    Audience: Elementary School Children (6-10) | Middle School Children (11-13) | Youth/Teen (up to 17) | Educators/Teachers | Museum/ISE Professionals
    Environment Type: Public Programs | Afterschool Programs | Summer and Extended Camps
    Access and Inclusion: Low Socioeconomic Status | Urban

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