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Concord Consortium

The Concord Consortium was founded in 1994[1] as an educational research and development organization to create large-scale improvements in K-14 teaching and learning through technology.[2]

Concord Consortium
Headquarters in Concord
Company type501(c)(3) nonprofit
Industry
FoundedConcord, Massachusetts (1994 (1994))
FounderRobert F. Tinker
Headquarters25 Love Lane
Concord, Massachusetts, United States
Area served
United States
Key people
Chad Dorsey
(President & CEO)

Lauren Walters
(Chair, Board of Directors)
ProductsEducational technology
Services
Number of employees
30 (in 2015)
Websiteconcord.org

The company conducts research on improving science, math and engineering education with the use of technology. It developed the Vernier Software & Technology probeware for classrooms and mobile computers, created modeling software for genetics and molecular education, and developed a Web-based high school.

Located in Concord, Massachusetts, and Emeryville, California, the Concord Consortium employs 30 software engineers, scientists, education developers and other staff. President and CEO Chad Dorsey[3] has led the organization since 2008, following the longtime tenure of founder Robert F. Tinker. The Concord Consortium is overseen by a 10-member Board of Directors that includes educators and business people. The organization works in partnership with universities, museums and other educational organizations, including Tufts University, New York Hall of Science, University of Illinois at Chicago, McGraw-Hill Education and National Geographic Society. The Concord Consortium is supported primarily by grants from the National Science Foundation (NSF), the U.S. Department of Education (DOE), the Noyce Foundation and Google.org.[4]

The early years edit

The Concord Consortium's first projects, funded by the National Science Foundation beginning in 1994, focused on guided student inquiry and the use of emerging technologies. A project-based approach to learning physics using inexpensive materials for hands-on investigations (Hands on Physics)[5] was based on the work of MIT professor John G. King. The Concord Consortium also pioneered the use of portable computers and sensors for student explorations outside the classroom (Science Learning in Context)[6][7] with science education researchers Joe Krajcik and Elliot Soloway. The International Netcourse Teacher Enhancement Coalition (INTEC)[8] used online facilitated discussion to provide online teacher professional development to secondary math and science teachers.[9] These projects became the platform from which the Concord Consortium created educational initiatives as a way to use digital technology to enhance classroom engagement and create new science, math and engineering curricula.

Educational technology and research edit

The Concord Consortium's major areas of research and development are modeling and simulations, probeware, mobile computing, online learning, and assessment. The organization has created educational technology research initiatives with hundreds of biology, chemistry, Earth and space science, engineering, mathematics and physics activities and materials for grade levels elementary to higher education.

Modeling and simulations edit

The company's research on models and simulations in education has focused on molecular literacy and making complex topics understandable and accessible at earlier grades. The organization has developed interactive computational models that manipulate unobservable events, such as atoms and molecules,[10] chemical reactions, gene and DNA manipulation[11] and evolution, and manipulate virtual environments in order to understand complex topics such as climate change. Molecular Workbench software, which won Science Magazine's 2011 SPORE Prize,[12][13] provides hundreds of interactive simulations for teaching and learning physics, chemistry, biology and nanotechnology.[14]

Concord Consortium modeling software also supports topics such as evolution,[15] Earth and space science,[16] energy efficiency, heredity,[17] and other topics for which computer simulations connect the real and virtual worlds. Many of these science and mathematics curriculum materials are available on the website for free through open content licenses.

Probeware and mobile computing edit

Using digital scientific probes and sensors that collect real-time temperature, motion, gas pressure, light and other data and display it for analysis on laptops and hand-held devices[18] has been a focus of the Concord Consortium since its founding. Robert Tinker used such probeware in the 1980s when he designed a microcomputer-based real-time temperature data grapher for education. Concord Consortium research has shown the effectiveness of sensors and handhelds in elementary and middle school inquiry-based science units.[19][20]

Online learning edit

The company's Virtual High School (VHS) offered Web-based courses to secondary school students on a subscription basis through a worldwide network of public and private schools.[21] VHS was originally funded by a U.S. Department of Education Technology Innovation Challenge Grant in 1997. In 2001, it became an independent nonprofit and in 2012 became the VHS Collaborative.[22] In 2001, VHS received the Stockholm Challenge Award[23] for exemplary use of technology in education. In 2005, it received U.S. Distance Learning Association (USDLA) Awards for Excellence in Programming and Excellence in Best Practices.[24]

In collaboration with PBS Teacherline and Teachscape, the Concord Consortium began offering Seeing Math online teacher professional development courses for elementary and secondary mathematics teachers in 2005. The Concord Consortium subsequently developed courses for secondary science teachers and for Physics First schools in Rhode Island.

The Concord e-Learning Model for online teaching and learning describes best practices for high-quality online courses.[25][26] It is one of the models for best practices in online course delivery.[27][28]

Assessment edit

The company develops technology-based assessment that records student responses in real time and embeds formative assessment within a lesson. Embedded software can track student performance and create automated assessments.[29][30] A collaborative project with the University of California, Berkeley and the University of Toronto explores student cumulative learning about energy concepts using embedded assessment and dynamic diagramming technology. A project with the Center for Occupational Research and Development (CORD), Tidewater Community College, and ETS is assessing students’ collaborative-problem skills based on fine-grained logs of student actions using simulations of electronic circuits. The Concord Consortium has also developed models and simulations that allow students to answer questions with an annotated image or by conducting a virtual experiment.

References edit

  1. ^ Concord Consortium. "History". The Concord Consortium. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  2. ^ Concord Consortium. . Concord Consortium. Archived from the original on 5 June 2015. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  3. ^ Anonymous (November 18, 2008). "The Concord Consortium Announces New President". Journal of Technology: 304.
  4. ^ Farrell, Michael B. (December 15, 2011). "Area groups part of $6M Google gift". Boston Globe.
  5. ^ "Hands On Physics: A New Conception of Physics". National Science Foundation. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  6. ^ "Science Learning in Context: Student Field Investigations". National Science Foundation. National Science Foundation. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  7. ^ Tinker, Robert; Krajcik, Joseph (Eds.) (2001). Portable Technologies: Science Learning in Context. New York: Kluwer Academic/Plenum Publishers.
  8. ^ "International Netcourse Teacher Enhancement Coalition Project". National Science Foundation. National Science Foundation. Retrieved May 9, 2015.
  9. ^ Collison, George; Elbaum, Bonnie; Haavind, Sarah; Tinker, Robert (2000). Facilitating Online Learning: Effective Strategies for Moderators. Madison, WI: Atwood Publishing. ISBN 978-1891859335.
  10. ^ Pallant, Amy; Robert F. Tinker (March 2004). "Reasoning with Atomic-Scale Molecular Dynamic Models". Journal of Science Education and Technology. 13 (1): 51–66. doi:10.1023/B:JOST.0000019638.01800.d0.
  11. ^ Buckley, Barbara C.; Janice D. Gobert; Ann C. H. Kindfield; Paul Horwitz; Robert F. Tinker; Bobbi Gerlits (March 2004). "Model-Based Teaching and Learning with Biologica: What Do They Learn? How Do They Learn? How Do We Know?". Journal of Science Education and Technology. 13 (1): 23–41. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.170.4526. doi:10.1023/B:JOST.0000019636.06814.e3.
  12. ^ Xie, Charles; Tinker, Robert; Pallant, Amy; Damelin, Daniel; Berenfeld, Boris (June 24, 2011). "Computational Experiments for Science Education". Science. 332 (6037): 1516–1517. doi:10.1126/science.1197314. PMID 21700864.
  13. ^ Ferrante, Ellen. "The Molecular Workbench Earns SPORE Award". National Science Foundation. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  14. ^ Leslie, Mitch (July 15, 2005). "Meeting of the Molecules". Science. 309 (5733): 361. doi:10.1126/science.309.5733.361d.
  15. ^ McIntyre, Cynthia; Trudi Lord; Paul Horwitz (October 2012). "BIG IDEAS for Little People". Science and Children. 50 (2): 42–45.
  16. ^ Pallant, Amy; Pryputniewicz, Sarah; Hee-Sun, Lee (March 2012). "Exploring the Unknown". The Science Teacher. 50 (2): 42–45.
  17. ^ Chi-Yan, Tsu; David R. Teagust (April 2004). "Motivational Aspects of Learning Genetics with Interactive Multimedia". The American Biology Teacher. 66 (4): 277–285. doi:10.1662/0002-7685(2004)066[0277:maolgw]2.0.co;2.
  18. ^ Trotter, Andrew (March 26, 2008). "'Probeware' on Increase In Schools' Science Labs". Education Week. 27 (29): 1, 14.
  19. ^ Metcalf, Shari J.; Robert Tinker (March 2004). "Probeware and Handhelds in Elementary and Middle School Science". Journal of Science Education and Technology. 13 (1): 43–49. CiteSeerX 10.1.1.550.2449. doi:10.1023/B:JOST.0000019637.22473.02.
  20. ^ Zucker, Andrew; Robert Tinker; Carolyn Staudt; Annie Mansfield; Shari Metcalf (2008). "Learning Science in Grades 3-8 Using Probeware and Computers: Findings from the TEEMSS II Project". Journal of Science Education and Technology. 17: 42–48. doi:10.1007/s10956-007-9086-y.
  21. ^ Zucker, Andy (2003). The Virtual High School: Teaching Generation V. New York: Teachers College Press. ISBN 978-0807742860.
  22. ^ Globe Newswire (May 2, 2012). "Virtual High School Becomes The VHS Collaborative(TM): Unveils New Name and Brand Identity to Reflect Market Leadership and Mission of Empowering Schools to Prepare Students for Success in a 21st Century World". NASDAQ.
  23. ^ Concord Consortium (October 3, 2001). "Virtual High School Wins 2001 Stockholm Challenge Award for Helping to Close the Gap in Education Technology". PR Newswire.
  24. ^ USDLA. . USDLA. Archived from the original on 2006-06-22. Retrieved 9 May 2015.
  25. ^ Collison, George; Elbaum, Bonnie; Haavind, Sarah; Tinker, Robert (2000). Facilitating Online Learning: Effective Strategies for Moderators. Madison, WI: Atwood Publishers.
  26. ^ Elbaum, Bonnie (2002). Essential Elements: Prepare, Design, and Teach Your Online Course. Madison, WI: Atwood Publishing. ISBN 978-1-891859-40-3. Retrieved 2012-11-11.
  27. ^ Smith, Lynn M. (2006). "Effective Science Tools Supporting Best Practice Methodologies in Distance Education". Distance Learning. 3 (4): 47–57.
  28. ^ Tinker, Robert (November 2001). "E-learning quality: The Concord model for learning from a distance". NASSP Bulletin. 85 (628): 36–46. doi:10.1177/019263650108562804.
  29. ^ Horwitz, Paul (December 2011). Interactive Technology-Supported Formative Assessment: How We Got Here and What Comes Next. In New Frontiers in Formative Assessment. Cambridge: Harvard Education Press. pp. 193–206. ISBN 978-1612501178.
  30. ^ Damelin, Dan; Koile, Kimberle (December 2011). Technology-Enabled Formative Assessment in the Science Classroom. In New Frontiers in Formative Assessment. Cambridge: Harvard Education Press. pp. 175–190. ISBN 978-1612501178.

External links edit

  • Official website
  • The Virtual High School Collaborative

• @Concord Newsletter

concord, consortium, founded, 1994, educational, research, development, organization, create, large, scale, improvements, teaching, learning, through, technology, headquarters, concordcompany, type501, nonprofitindustryresearchresearch, developmentfoundedconco. The Concord Consortium was founded in 1994 1 as an educational research and development organization to create large scale improvements in K 14 teaching and learning through technology 2 Concord ConsortiumHeadquarters in ConcordCompany type501 c 3 nonprofitIndustryResearchResearch and DevelopmentFoundedConcord Massachusetts 1994 1994 FounderRobert F TinkerHeadquarters25 Love LaneConcord Massachusetts United StatesArea servedUnited StatesKey peopleChad Dorsey President amp CEO Lauren Walters Chair Board of Directors ProductsEducational technologyServicesResearchResearch and developmentNumber of employees30 in 2015 Websiteconcord wbr org The company conducts research on improving science math and engineering education with the use of technology It developed the Vernier Software amp Technology probeware for classrooms and mobile computers created modeling software for genetics and molecular education and developed a Web based high school Located in Concord Massachusetts and Emeryville California the Concord Consortium employs 30 software engineers scientists education developers and other staff President and CEO Chad Dorsey 3 has led the organization since 2008 following the longtime tenure of founder Robert F Tinker The Concord Consortium is overseen by a 10 member Board of Directors that includes educators and business people The organization works in partnership with universities museums and other educational organizations including Tufts University New York Hall of Science University of Illinois at Chicago McGraw Hill Education and National Geographic Society The Concord Consortium is supported primarily by grants from the National Science Foundation NSF the U S Department of Education DOE the Noyce Foundation and Google org 4 Contents 1 The early years 2 Educational technology and research 2 1 Modeling and simulations 2 2 Probeware and mobile computing 2 3 Online learning 2 4 Assessment 3 References 4 External linksThe early years editThe Concord Consortium s first projects funded by the National Science Foundation beginning in 1994 focused on guided student inquiry and the use of emerging technologies A project based approach to learning physics using inexpensive materials for hands on investigations Hands on Physics 5 was based on the work of MIT professor John G King The Concord Consortium also pioneered the use of portable computers and sensors for student explorations outside the classroom Science Learning in Context 6 7 with science education researchers Joe Krajcik and Elliot Soloway The International Netcourse Teacher Enhancement Coalition INTEC 8 used online facilitated discussion to provide online teacher professional development to secondary math and science teachers 9 These projects became the platform from which the Concord Consortium created educational initiatives as a way to use digital technology to enhance classroom engagement and create new science math and engineering curricula Educational technology and research editThe Concord Consortium s major areas of research and development are modeling and simulations probeware mobile computing online learning and assessment The organization has created educational technology research initiatives with hundreds of biology chemistry Earth and space science engineering mathematics and physics activities and materials for grade levels elementary to higher education Modeling and simulations edit The company s research on models and simulations in education has focused on molecular literacy and making complex topics understandable and accessible at earlier grades The organization has developed interactive computational models that manipulate unobservable events such as atoms and molecules 10 chemical reactions gene and DNA manipulation 11 and evolution and manipulate virtual environments in order to understand complex topics such as climate change Molecular Workbench software which won Science Magazine s 2011 SPORE Prize 12 13 provides hundreds of interactive simulations for teaching and learning physics chemistry biology and nanotechnology 14 Concord Consortium modeling software also supports topics such as evolution 15 Earth and space science 16 energy efficiency heredity 17 and other topics for which computer simulations connect the real and virtual worlds Many of these science and mathematics curriculum materials are available on the website for free through open content licenses Probeware and mobile computing edit Using digital scientific probes and sensors that collect real time temperature motion gas pressure light and other data and display it for analysis on laptops and hand held devices 18 has been a focus of the Concord Consortium since its founding Robert Tinker used such probeware in the 1980s when he designed a microcomputer based real time temperature data grapher for education Concord Consortium research has shown the effectiveness of sensors and handhelds in elementary and middle school inquiry based science units 19 20 Online learning edit The company s Virtual High School VHS offered Web based courses to secondary school students on a subscription basis through a worldwide network of public and private schools 21 VHS was originally funded by a U S Department of Education Technology Innovation Challenge Grant in 1997 In 2001 it became an independent nonprofit and in 2012 became the VHS Collaborative 22 In 2001 VHS received the Stockholm Challenge Award 23 for exemplary use of technology in education In 2005 it received U S Distance Learning Association USDLA Awards for Excellence in Programming and Excellence in Best Practices 24 In collaboration with PBS Teacherline and Teachscape the Concord Consortium began offering Seeing Math online teacher professional development courses for elementary and secondary mathematics teachers in 2005 The Concord Consortium subsequently developed courses for secondary science teachers and for Physics First schools in Rhode Island The Concord e Learning Model for online teaching and learning describes best practices for high quality online courses 25 26 It is one of the models for best practices in online course delivery 27 28 Assessment edit The company develops technology based assessment that records student responses in real time and embeds formative assessment within a lesson Embedded software can track student performance and create automated assessments 29 30 A collaborative project with the University of California Berkeley and the University of Toronto explores student cumulative learning about energy concepts using embedded assessment and dynamic diagramming technology A project with the Center for Occupational Research and Development CORD Tidewater Community College and ETS is assessing students collaborative problem skills based on fine grained logs of student actions using simulations of electronic circuits The Concord Consortium has also developed models and simulations that allow students to answer questions with an annotated image or by conducting a virtual experiment References edit Concord Consortium History The Concord Consortium Retrieved 9 May 2015 Concord Consortium Mission and People Concord Consortium Archived from the original on 5 June 2015 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Anonymous November 18 2008 The Concord Consortium Announces New President Journal of Technology 304 Farrell Michael B December 15 2011 Area groups part of 6M Google gift Boston Globe Hands On Physics A New Conception of Physics National Science Foundation Retrieved 9 May 2015 Science Learning in Context Student Field Investigations National Science Foundation National Science Foundation Retrieved May 9 2015 Tinker Robert Krajcik Joseph Eds 2001 Portable Technologies Science Learning in Context New York Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers International Netcourse Teacher Enhancement Coalition Project National Science Foundation National Science Foundation Retrieved May 9 2015 Collison George Elbaum Bonnie Haavind Sarah Tinker Robert 2000 Facilitating Online Learning Effective Strategies for Moderators Madison WI Atwood Publishing ISBN 978 1891859335 Pallant Amy Robert F Tinker March 2004 Reasoning with Atomic Scale Molecular Dynamic Models Journal of Science Education and Technology 13 1 51 66 doi 10 1023 B JOST 0000019638 01800 d0 Buckley Barbara C Janice D Gobert Ann C H Kindfield Paul Horwitz Robert F Tinker Bobbi Gerlits March 2004 Model Based Teaching and Learning with Biologica What Do They Learn How Do They Learn How Do We Know Journal of Science Education and Technology 13 1 23 41 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 170 4526 doi 10 1023 B JOST 0000019636 06814 e3 Xie Charles Tinker Robert Pallant Amy Damelin Daniel Berenfeld Boris June 24 2011 Computational Experiments for Science Education Science 332 6037 1516 1517 doi 10 1126 science 1197314 PMID 21700864 Ferrante Ellen The Molecular Workbench Earns SPORE Award National Science Foundation Retrieved 9 May 2015 Leslie Mitch July 15 2005 Meeting of the Molecules Science 309 5733 361 doi 10 1126 science 309 5733 361d McIntyre Cynthia Trudi Lord Paul Horwitz October 2012 BIG IDEAS for Little People Science and Children 50 2 42 45 Pallant Amy Pryputniewicz Sarah Hee Sun Lee March 2012 Exploring the Unknown The Science Teacher 50 2 42 45 Chi Yan Tsu David R Teagust April 2004 Motivational Aspects of Learning Genetics with Interactive Multimedia The American Biology Teacher 66 4 277 285 doi 10 1662 0002 7685 2004 066 0277 maolgw 2 0 co 2 Trotter Andrew March 26 2008 Probeware on Increase In Schools Science Labs Education Week 27 29 1 14 Metcalf Shari J Robert Tinker March 2004 Probeware and Handhelds in Elementary and Middle School Science Journal of Science Education and Technology 13 1 43 49 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 550 2449 doi 10 1023 B JOST 0000019637 22473 02 Zucker Andrew Robert Tinker Carolyn Staudt Annie Mansfield Shari Metcalf 2008 Learning Science in Grades 3 8 Using Probeware and Computers Findings from the TEEMSS II Project Journal of Science Education and Technology 17 42 48 doi 10 1007 s10956 007 9086 y Zucker Andy 2003 The Virtual High School Teaching Generation V New York Teachers College Press ISBN 978 0807742860 Globe Newswire May 2 2012 Virtual High School Becomes The VHS Collaborative TM Unveils New Name and Brand Identity to Reflect Market Leadership and Mission of Empowering Schools to Prepare Students for Success in a 21st Century World NASDAQ Concord Consortium October 3 2001 Virtual High School Wins 2001 Stockholm Challenge Award for Helping to Close the Gap in Education Technology PR Newswire USDLA United States Distance Learning Association USDLA 2005 USDLA Archived from the original on 2006 06 22 Retrieved 9 May 2015 Collison George Elbaum Bonnie Haavind Sarah Tinker Robert 2000 Facilitating Online Learning Effective Strategies for Moderators Madison WI Atwood Publishers Elbaum Bonnie 2002 Essential Elements Prepare Design and Teach Your Online Course Madison WI Atwood Publishing ISBN 978 1 891859 40 3 Retrieved 2012 11 11 Smith Lynn M 2006 Effective Science Tools Supporting Best Practice Methodologies in Distance Education Distance Learning 3 4 47 57 Tinker Robert November 2001 E learning quality The Concord model for learning from a distance NASSP Bulletin 85 628 36 46 doi 10 1177 019263650108562804 Horwitz Paul December 2011 Interactive Technology Supported Formative Assessment How We Got Here and What Comes Next In New Frontiers in Formative Assessment Cambridge Harvard Education Press pp 193 206 ISBN 978 1612501178 Damelin Dan Koile Kimberle December 2011 Technology Enabled Formative Assessment in the Science Classroom In New Frontiers in Formative Assessment Cambridge Harvard Education Press pp 175 190 ISBN 978 1612501178 External links editOfficial website The Virtual High School Collaborative Concord Newsletter Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Concord Consortium amp oldid 1180610269, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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