Promoting STEM Education of Future Chemistry Teachers with an Engineering Approach Involving Single-Board Computers
Abstract
:Featured Application
Abstract
1. Introduction
- What kind of opportunities does an SBC project with an engineering approach offer to STEM education? (RQ1)
- What kind of challenges does an SBC project with an engineering approach initiate with future chemistry teachers? (RQ2)
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Single-Board Computer as a Tool for Experiment Automation
2.2. STEM in Chemistry Teacher Education
2.3. The Engineering Approach and Using It to Prepare and Realize a Sound Concept
- Concept synthesis;
- Concept evaluation;
- Materialization of the concept with the highest evaluation result.
2.4. Research Context
2.5. Data Collection
- Field notes were written during the course by the course instructors. These included remarks and observations about all the course sessions and all the additional communications between the students and the instructors (e-mails, posts on course Q and A board, and oral communications outside the course);
- At the end of the course, semi-structured interviews [46] with the participants were performed, recorded, and transcribed. The interviews were conducted as part of the workflow presented in the Supplementary Materials;
- As the final assignment of the course, the students wrote and published a project-description article in an open-access journal for teachers-in-service training purposes. Articles are licensed under the Creative Commons attribution license (CC-BY), which enabled us to include them in our data. Three out of the four articles by the participating students were peer-reviewed, accepted, and published.
2.6. Data Analysis
- RQ1: Opportunities of SBCs for STEM education;
- RQ2: Challenges that the engineering approach initiates.
3. Results and Discussion
- “Build something that will work rather than just something on paper”.
- “Try to make something simple that will work”.
- “Just pass the course that’s still missing before my graduation”.
3.1. Opportunities That an SBC Project Offers for STEM Education (RQ1)
3.2. Challenges That the Engineering Approach Initiates (RQ2)
4. Conclusions
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Semi-Structured Interview Schema
- Write your own challenge proposal
- Prepare the documentation for your projects
- Concept synthesis
- Concept evaluation
- Opening the Raspberry Pi kit and making it boot for the first time
- Identifying the needs for new hardware and making orders
- Individual work on your project during sessions 6–9
- Finding and installing the suitable software
- 3D-modelling and 3D-printing the components
- Testing the system (hardware and software working together)
- Seminar
- How did you do each step?
- What did you learn from it?
- What were the challenges in each step?
- What kind of kind of support did you receive for solving those challenges?
- Was this support sufficient or would you want more?
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Data Source | Raw Data | Simplified Expression | Observation/ Solution | Category | Research Question |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Article A3 | “This device can be used in chemistry education as a demonstration tool or as part of a project-based learning lesson plan centered around laboratory experiments, aimed at figuring out what affects the quality of air.” | The result is a diverse tool for education | SBC project produced a working device with multiple educational opportunities | Future teaching (5) | Opportunities (RQ1) |
Interview I1 | “So, it involves a lot of scientific knowledge. Uh, and problem solving. And quite meticulously. One would have to, at least from my viewpoint, just find the allocated time and have a very large knowledge base to actually execute these projects.” | Planning takes time | Planning needs more guidance | Planning (4) | Challenges (RQ2) |
Category | Observations/Solutions |
---|---|
Lecture contents (1) | Presentation of opportunities early on, based on working examples. Learn the function-and-functionality matrix for systematic planning of objectives, components, and budget. |
Planning (2) | Component selection should be based on the needs first |
Supply (3) | Opportunity of acquiring new know-how about buying components. |
Learning (4) | Opportunity of emphasizing and affirmation of the concept of lifelong learning. Seminar enables learning from others. Opportunity of learning-by-doing experience. Understanding instruments in science education. Opportunity of healthy competition with peers. Opportunity of satisfaction in reaching a goal. Opportunity to build on old knowledge in a multidisciplinary context Opportunity to learn the connection between chemical phenomena |
Future teaching (5) | Context for project-based learning Show the instrumentation of science to students SBC project produced a working device with multiple educational opportunities. Opportunity of providing a positive example and a role model. Opportunity of emphasizing and affirmation of gender equality. |
Category | Observations/Solutions |
---|---|
Communication (1) | Help and interaction possibilities should be offered more clearly. Expressing a clear intent to provide support. Presentation of opportunities early on, based on working examples. Realistic feedback on the projects’ challenges and opportunities. Providing means to discuss the issues. Providing help to students who find themselves in frustrating situations is essential. |
Guidance (2) | An open engineering task is challenging. Monitoring of students’ notes is required. Providing support by documenting the project’s progress. Spare parts available if something goes wrong in the assembly. Workshops for all basic engineering skills are important (e.g., soldering, coding, 3D printing, etc.). Providing a means to reach consensus when discussing open issues. Providing well-argumented and friendly pressure to help solve problems. |
Learning (3) | Adapt theory to previous knowledge and skills. Clear communication of goals is needed. Students lack of experience, demanded content knowledge, tacit and meta level knowledge. Steps in the design process must be explained. Providing pointers to relevant literature is needed. Lectures has to be introduced and timed in accordance with previous knowledge. Help with coding is required from instructors. More training on project management. Frequent live meetings to support progress. Live classes with hands-on experience increase understanding and improve synthesized concepts. Students need a clear working schedule about when instructors are available, and the range of communications channels. Step-by-step procedure for problem solving, e.g., a form. Providing basic terminology is needed. Providing help with mastering the basics of OS navigation helps reduce students’ frustration. |
Planning (4) | Planning phase needs more attention and guidance because poor planning makes finishing harder. Project is challenging and demands careful planning from instructors, such as curation of potential projects. Prices and availability must be verified before starting the project. Project planning to minimize costs is essential. More careful planning of component supply is required. Cataloguing the components simplifies the planning of activities. Make sure everything is available at one provider or the laboratory inventory. Students need help with the identification of compatibility. Questions about hardware specifics must be answered in time to continue the project. Realistic feedback from the plans. More support to component selections. Directions on application must be passed on earlier in the project. |
Collaboration (5) | Support when searching for potential collaboration partners. More peer support. Peer meetings can be therapeutic. |
Opportunities (RQ1) | Challenges (RQ2) | |
---|---|---|
Categories | Lecture contents (1) Planning (2) Supply (3) Learning (4) Future teaching (5) | Communication (1) Guidance (2) Learning (3) Planning (4) Collaboration (5) |
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Ambrož, M.; Pernaa, J.; Haatainen, O.; Aksela, M. Promoting STEM Education of Future Chemistry Teachers with an Engineering Approach Involving Single-Board Computers. Appl. Sci. 2023, 13, 3278. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13053278
Ambrož M, Pernaa J, Haatainen O, Aksela M. Promoting STEM Education of Future Chemistry Teachers with an Engineering Approach Involving Single-Board Computers. Applied Sciences. 2023; 13(5):3278. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13053278
Chicago/Turabian StyleAmbrož, Miha, Johannes Pernaa, Outi Haatainen, and Maija Aksela. 2023. "Promoting STEM Education of Future Chemistry Teachers with an Engineering Approach Involving Single-Board Computers" Applied Sciences 13, no. 5: 3278. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13053278
APA StyleAmbrož, M., Pernaa, J., Haatainen, O., & Aksela, M. (2023). Promoting STEM Education of Future Chemistry Teachers with an Engineering Approach Involving Single-Board Computers. Applied Sciences, 13(5), 3278. https://doi.org/10.3390/app13053278