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A Quest for More Critical Thinkers

By Westin Porter

The National Science Foundation (NSF) has awarded a grant to the Natural History Museum of Utah and the College of Education at the University of Utah for the proposed project titled Engaging Practices for Inquiry with Collections in Bioscience (EPIC Bioscience), with total funding expected to reach $1.3 million. EPIC is a pioneering project that builds on the work that began with Research Quest.

Student uses Research Quest

Research Quest is an online series of investigations, including videos, instructional guides, 3D images of digitized museum objects, and more. The investigations, which are currently geared toward middle school students with plans of expanding to more age groups, engage students in a series of scientific, researchable questions designed to develop their critical thinking skills.

The project began several years ago, and proved overwhelmingly successful through the Research Quest pilot group of investigations used by more than 30,000 students. Now, with the National Science Foundation support of EPIC, NHMU is focused on helping expand the way students think about science in digital spaces.

Classroom engaging in Research Quest investigations

EPIC Bioscience is a multidisciplinary effort that will use digitized objects from NHMU’s botany, entomology, and vertebrate collections as a means for middle school students to engage in authentic research to practice key skills like critical thinking, communication, and collaboration. Like Research Quest, students will use the same objects that are housed in museum collections to ask many of the same questions that scientists grapple with every day. In addition to expanding the Research Quest catalog of investigations, the NSF grant will support efforts to share this work with other collections-based museums, exploring innovative ways to leverage their digitized collections for learning.

“Objects have inherent interest for students and provide concrete content for study, with the result that scientific investigations centered around objects are able to motivate students and connect to their prior knowledge in meaningful ways,” said Kirsten Butcher, Professor of Instructional Design and Educational Technology at the University of Utah. “Digitized objects from museum collections provide a vast educational resource that has yet to be tapped. EPIC Bioscience is at the forefront of this effort, exploring the potential of digitized museum objects to enhance and improve science learning for middle school students.”

NHMU staff assists students in using Research Quest

Research Quest is one instrument NHMU has created to make itself accessible and relevant to students around the state, as well as introduce object-based inquiry and engage critical thinking skills. Over the three years slated for the NSF EPIC-funded project more than 1,500 Title I and rural students in Utah will have the opportunity to use the new EPIC Bioscience program. Additionally, all student interactions—how they engage and think about the research questions—is data that will be collected, analyzed, and eventually made available to the public.

“We’re enthusiastically exploring technology-based opportunities to continue our museum’s decades-long work to support K-12 students and teachers,” said Madlyn Runburg, NHMU Director of Education Initiatives. “Research Quest is the product of that work and now with the addition of EPIC Bioscience, we can expand our catalog of online investigations and better understand how learning is happening with these resources, a primary focus as we look to the future.”

Research Quest is free, easy-to-use, engaging for students, and supports many curriculum standards. Learn more about using it in your classroom here

The Research Quest project is made possible with generous support from the Joseph and Evelyn Rosenblatt Charitable Fund and the IJ and Jeanné Wagner Foundation. Their ongoing support, combined with a generous grant from the Utah Department of Workforce Services’ Utah Cluster Acceleration Partnership program, funding from the Utah State Legislature’s Informal Science Education Enhancement program, and a grant from the National Science Foundation, has allowed Research Quest  to become a valued teaching resource for teachers and students throughout Utah and in states nationwide.

Westin Porter is a Digital Science Writer for the Natural History Museum of Utah, a part of the University of Utah in Salt Lake City. Our mission is to illuminate the natural world and the place of humans within it. In addition to housing outstanding exhibits for the public, NHMU is a research museum. Learn more.

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