The event evaluation report is now nearly finished. Sorry for a bit of a hiatus while we were running Iโm a Councillor (just because weโve got our new IAS baby, doesnโt mean we can neglect our first born:-)).
We hope to get the evaluation report online some time next week (plus a summary โ the whole thing is over 100 pages long. Even I donโt think anyone will want to read all of it, beautifully crafted prose though it is). The extremely short version is that everyone loved it and every single teacher and scientist who responded said they would recommend the event to a colleague. Even the teachers who got it dumped on them at the last minute loved it.
We plan to run the event again in March, with 200 classes taking part, for National Science and Engineering Week (NSEW). And then again in June, with even more classes. June seems to be the optimum time for most teachers, especially with year 9 classes. But weโre still trying to work out the practicalities, and most importantly, secure funding.
Weโve been talking to various people, who have been very positive about the event. In order to really scale it up though, we may need to consider a mixture of funding โ possibly charging schools to take part and/or getting sponsorship from companies or scientific institutes. Iโm reluctant to charge schools because it may rule some schools out. But it wouldnโt be a lot of money. We worked out that if we are doing it on a bigger scale, IAS will cost about ยฃ5 per child. Itโs probably less than an afternoon in a nearby museum, or a half day visit to the school by an external professional.
Considering that teachers can get up to a monthโs worth of lessons out of IAS, that has to be excellent value for money. Especially when you think about the excitement it generates and the integrated way it gets students engaging with science and How Science Work. Yes, OK, I may be a bit biased.:-)
Even if we donโt charge schools, weโll still have to recruit them, and a lot of scientists too. I think getting 200 classes for March wouldnโt be too difficult, because just about every teacher who took part said theyโd want to do it again next year, with more of their classes. We also had plenty of teachers who applied for the pilot who we didnโt have spaces for. But weโll have to put some effort into recruiting 500 classes for June though.
If anyoneโs got any bright ideas on who to approach for funding, and the best way to recruit schools and scientists for these bigger events, then let me know.
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