On board with MOSAiC: how an Arctic research expedition can engage
students in Earth’s systems thinking
Abstract
Why would hundreds of scientists from around the world freeze a ship in
Arctic sea ice for an entire year, braving subzero temperatures and
months of polar darkness? This may sound like a fictional adventure
movie plot, but from September 2019 through October 2020, the MOSAiC
(Multidisciplinary drifting Observatory for the Study of Arctic Climate)
Arctic research expedition did just this. Currently, the Arctic is
warming twice as fast as the global average (a phenomenon known as
Arctic amplification) and due to a lack of observations, there is
considerable uncertainty in climate models projecting the Arctic climate
of the future. The MOSAiC expedition aims to better understand the
changing Arctic climate system by gathering data from ground zero over a
full seasonal cycle to augment satellite observation data. Using the
expedition as an engagement hook, scientists and curriculum developers
developed a high school earth science curriculum anchored by the
phenomenon that climate scientists are actively trying to explain:
Arctic amplification. The curriculum follows the model-based inquiry
instructional framework where each lesson provides students with
learning experiences (e.g., virtual reality tours of MOSAiC field sites,
analyzing authentic Arctic satellite datasets) that relate back to the
phenomena. Focusing on explaining natural phenomena provides an
authentic context for students to learn and apply scientific
understanding, which research shows can help engage students in NGSS
scientific practices. Here we present an overview of the learning
sequence using refinement of mental models throughout the unit and
present preliminary results from pre-post assessments from two educator
workshops (~100 teachers) that show that participants’
understanding of Earth’s climate system improved significantly after
engaging with the curriculum. Based on these results, we expect this
curriculum to be an important tool in engaging students in Earth’s
systems thinking.