ABSTRACT
Interest is growing among out-of-school time (OST) educators in integrating the arts into STEM (science, technology, engineering, and mathematics) programming (e.g., Kelton & Saraniero, 2018). Arts-integrated STEM-or STEAM-programming now takes place in a wide variety of OST environments, from relatively institutional learning settings, such as a library, to emergent or fluid settings, such as a pop-up program in a housing development community room.
ABSTRACT
We present two interventions aimed at promoting science learning. We utilize arts-based assessments alongside traditional measures to examine systems thinking. Taking place in rural communities in Washington State and focusing on students in third through fifth grades, our results indicate that arts-based assessment in STEM can support demonstration of systems thinking about socio-scientific issues. We conclude by illustrating the viability of arts-based approaches for assessment and how these methods can complement and extend more traditional measures of learning in and out of the classroom.