Note: The UT-Dallas Science Education team has been in the field for several weeks now. Unfortunately, our satellite phone bill was due and we were not able to upload the image directly from the field. We have done such from Big Bend before... although the cost of the call is rather expensive, it is great fun and can be done!
We would also greatly appreciate it if you could take a minute to submit your responses to the Constructivist Multimedia Learning Environment Survey (CMLES) Teacher Actual Form. Enter "Big Bend VFT" for the class id and describe what actually happens in your classroom as you teach lessons based on this Big Bend Virtual Field Trip. Thanks!
What exactly is a "virtual field trip"?
As defined by Nix, 1999 in A Critical Evaluation of Science-related Virtual Field Trips available on the World Wide Web: "a virtual field trip is an inter-related collection of images, supporting text and/or other media, delivered electronically via the World Wide Web, in a format that can be professionally presented to relate the essence of a visit to a time or place. The virtual experience becomes a unique part of the participants' life experience".
How can I use "virtual field trips" in my classroom?
There are many ways to use virtual field trips in your classroom. All trips address the introductory level science and basic process skills described in state and national standards documents, like the TEKS. Select teacher's ideas for using the Big Bend trip in their classroom are presented in
Using the Big Bend Virtual Field Trip in your Classroom.
Eventually, we'll link aspects of the virtual field trip to specific TEKS and standards to assist in lesson planning. In the meantime, please click on the links below to review particular items of interest:
Web Site Contribution Evaluation Rubric
Inquiry supports learning by suggesting that students design and carry out activities to answer their own questions. This teaching technique is dependent on the experience of the teacher in dealing with this type of learning and on the experience of the students with an inquiry learning environment. Students generating their own questions and performing their own labs is not an automatic occurrence. It is a technique that must be taught to the students and teachers alike. Find out more in Levels of Inquiry, an article by Cynthia E. Ledbetter.
Click here to find out more about Woodrow Wilson National Fellowship Foundation's TORCH - Teacher Outreach programs.
Click here to find out more about Science Education at the University of Texas at Dallas.