Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

An Overview of the NISE Network www.nisenet.org. Presentation Overview NISE Network Network Community Educational Products Get More Involved.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "An Overview of the NISE Network www.nisenet.org. Presentation Overview NISE Network Network Community Educational Products Get More Involved."— Presentation transcript:

1 An Overview of the NISE Network www.nisenet.org

2 Presentation Overview NISE Network Network Community Educational Products Get More Involved

3 NISE Network Nanoscale Informal Science Education Network The NISE Net is a national community of researchers and informal science educators dedicated to fostering public awareness, engagement, and understanding of nanoscale science, engineering, and technology.

4 Funding Years 1-5: (2005-2010) Building the network Years 6-10: (2010-2015) Engaging the public through the network

5 What is Nano? Nano is: Small: 1 billion nanometers in a meter Different properties at this scale Manipulating matter in different ways can lead to exciting breakthroughs in: Medicine Computing Energy Materials technologies

6 NISE Network: Goals Network community: increase capacity in the field Support partners in engaging the public in nanoscale science, engineering, and technology Form partnerships among Informal Science Education institutions (ISEs) and research centers Educational products: engage the public Develop and distribute educational products Raise public awareness and understanding of nano

7 NISE Network: Strategy NISE Network ISE organizations Research centers Network community partnerships practices and knowledge resources and materials workshops and training Educational products programs exhibits media tools and guides InputsOutputsOutcomes Increase capacity in the field to engage the public in nano Engage the public, increasing awareness and understanding of nano

8 Network Community

9

10 Network Community: Structure Oregon Museum of Science and Industry Lawrence Hall of Science Sciencenter Science Museum of Minnesota Children’s Museum of Houston The Franklin Institute Museum of Life and Science INTERNATIONA L CHILDREN’S MUSEUMS Children’s Museum of Houston Lawrence Hall of Science

11 Network Community: Role of Regional Hubs Share NISE Network resources with partners Support the infusion of nano content into partner museum institutions— increasing public impact Encourage further involvement in the network Connect informal science educators and local researchers

12 Network Community: Strategy Nano-Infused Partners Tier 2 ~100 Broad Reach Partners Tier 3 >300

13 Professional Development

14 Network Community: Professional Impacts Pyramid more intense, greater impact funded partners NanoDays presenters, online workshop attendees, conference session attendees, nisenet.org users, NanoBite newsletter recipients less intense, lesser impact Tier 1: 14 organizations 100 people active at a time Tier 2: 100 organizations 300 people active at a time intensive workshops & network wide meeting participants Tier 3: many organizations 5,000 people by year 10

15 Network Community: Professional Development Regional meetings ( alternating years) Network wide meetings ( alternating years) National & pre-conference workshops (1-2/yr) Online workshops (1-2/yr) Online catalog of tools, guides, and resources Science communication and inquiry training for scientists and college students

16 Educational Products

17 Educational Products Strategy: Public Outreach Pyramid shorter, less intense experiences longer, more intense experiences forums, summer camps cart demos, presentations tabletop exhibits, exhibits, NanoDays events partner products (DragonflyTV, NOVA Making Stuff) NISE Net public web portal page, videos on YouTube thousands millions tens of millions

18 Educational Products: Programs Public programs (demonstrations presentations, videos) Group programs (after school, school group, camps) Adult programs (science cafes, media) Training resources, tools, and guides for professional audiences

19 Educational Products: Exhibits Exhibits on display at OMSI, Museum of Science, and Arkansas Discovery Network Mini-exhibition under development, copies will be distributed in 2012-13

20 Educational Products: NanoDays 200 physical kits, 470,000 visitors in 2010, 2011 225 physical kits for 2012 Physical kit application: October Materials available January

21 Educational Products: Website www.nisenet.org for professionals www.whatisnano.org for the public Professional site: Catalog of educational products New links to external products News and events Member directory Social networking links

22 Educational Products: Website Catalog > 200 products Programs Exhibits Media Tools and guides Evaluation reports

23 Public Engagement Goals Awareness and Understanding

24 Content Map: 4 Big Ideas 1.Nanometer-sized things are very small, and often behave differently than larger things do. 1.Scientists and engineers have formed the interdisciplinary field of nanotechnology by investigating properties and manipulating matter at the nanoscale. 1.Nanoscience, nanotechnology, and nanoengineering lead to new knowledge and innovations that weren’t possible before. 1.Nanotechnologies have costs, risks, and benefits that affect our lives in ways we cannot always predict.

25 Public Engagement: Inclusive Audiences Define audiences and learning strategies Universal design Spanish language translations Resources for professionals

26 Get More Involved

27 How to Get More Involved 1. Get in touch with your regional hub leader Oregon Museum of Science and Industry Lawrence Hall of Science Sciencenter Science Museum of Minnesota Children’s Museum of Houston The Franklin Institute Museum of Life and Science INTERNATIONAL CHILDREN’S MUSEUMS Children’s Museum of Houston Lawrence Hall of Science

28 How to Get More Involved 2. Use the Website networking tools Update your profile on the website: www.nisenet.org/faq Sign up for the monthly NanoBite newsletter Connect with people in your region Join our social networking sites:

29 How to Get More Involved 3. Host a NanoDays Event: March 24-April 1, 2012 October: physical kit applications available January: digital kit materials available online Continue to use your NanoDays materials throughout the year

30 How to Get More Involved 4.Participate in a professional development opportunity: Online workshops (2 per year) Future years: regional workshops Future years: more national workshops

31 How to Get More Involved 5. Try something new: Lots of different program formats and content in the Catalog Mini-Grants beginning in 2012 to help you to integrate nano educational programming into your existing offerings Collaborations between universities and museums

32 How to Get More Involved 6. Help us help you Talk to us! We listen and respond to your feedback and needs

33 THANK YOU! To all our partners - we could not do this work without you!

34 This presentation is based on work supported by the National Science Foundation under Grant No. 0940143. Any opinions, findings, and conclusions or recommendations expressed in this presentation are those of the author(s) and do not necessarily reflect the views of the Foundation.


Download ppt "An Overview of the NISE Network www.nisenet.org. Presentation Overview NISE Network Network Community Educational Products Get More Involved."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google