the ISP-TED Tutor

The ISP (Inquiry-based Science Project) Tutor Project is funded by a grant from the Institute of Education Sciences (IES grant R305A170176) to Carnegie Mellon University Psychology Professor David Klahr (PI) and Dr. Stephanie Siler (Co-PI). The aim of this project is to build upon a previously-developed computer tutor, the TED Tutor, which helps elementary and middle school students learn how to design controlled experiments. Under this grant, we are adding more experimental domains to the TED Tutor as well as instructional modules on other aspects of experiment-based science inquiry, including: selecting research questions; developing hypotheses; conducting background research; interpreting experimental outcomes; drawing conclusions.

Image of TED Tutor, Ramps experiment

Developed under prior IES grants (R305H060034 and R305A100404), the TED Tutor provides instruction on the control of variables strategy (CVS) through a range of activities involved in formulating and conducting independent inquiry-based science projects. The TED Tutor includes: (1) pretests and posttests that assess students' ability to design and evaluate experiments in several problem domains, (2) instructional activities where students must indicate whether experimental comparisons would allow them to find out about the effect of the focal variable and why, and (3) incremental remedial instructional pathways (adaptive based on students' performance on pretests and during instruction).

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