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			Meeting Minutes
			 
 Friday, June 15thThe program is finished and will be installed on Ms. Nowak's computer.
 
		Tuesday, May 15thThe program, though incomplete, was shown at the CS92 party.  Work will continue on the program until it is finished.
 
		Friday, May 10thThe decision has been made to port the program to Director.
 
		Tuesday, May 8thToday, we gave a demo to the class of our current work.  Because the connectivity of the program isn't yet finished, the program had to be presented in different parts.  Comments from the class were made and will be taken into account.  Because the Shockwave functionality is still not compatible, the program may have to be ported from Authorware to Director.
 
		Tuesday, April 10thWe met before class with Nancy Nowak to discuss our questions and 
              ideas. Nancy read over our proposed questions and made some corrections 
              and suggestions. Basically, most of the questions were VERY high 
              level for her students, but the material is proving to be particularly 
              hard to test
              without incorporating vocabulary specific to materials science, 
              and science in general. The question topics were separated into 
              variables, scientific method, polymers, composites, metals, ceramics, 
              properties, weight, and thickness, although Richard found it useful 
              to combine topics, such as how
              an alloy is similar to a composite.
 After talking with Nancy, it seems imperative to use audio with 
              the questions, which will actually help in timing how long the answers 
              (whether right or wrong) and the associated description of why an 
              answer is right or wrong should be kept up on the screen. To prevent 
              random guessing, the audio and possibly time delay on questions 
              should work. Additionally, if a point scheme is drawn up for the 
              quizzes, then there will be no points awarded for the wrong answer 
              after two guesses.  We also need to rank questions, which Paul suggested putting in 
              a tree that would give students harder questions in particular areas 
              after they have mastered the easier questions. Richard will be working 
              on the pool screen and the introduction to materials science, and 
              if possible, an animation of the microstructures upon successful 
              or unsuccessful dives. Sunday, April 8thWe met in the MSLab to see the Paul's progress thus far with the 
              quiz. Paul has established the answer randomizer so that students 
              will not have consistent letter answers for each question. The randomizer 
              worked great after a little bit of alteration, although this prevents 
              some of the question types. For example, Mary had proposed multiple 
              choice questions with "all of the above" answers, which 
              will have to be worked out differently, as "above" doesn't 
              refer to much if the answer is randomized
              to be at the top of the answer choices.
 Mary showed her work on some of the lab material screens. Mary's 
              question was successfully integrated into Paul's quiz, and the group 
              is now fully aware that questions have to be constantly checked 
              and reworked to ensure that students will be able to
              comprehend the content of the questions.  Thursday, March 22ndWe met with Janet and Brian to talk about what we now knew. They 
              told us that rather than temperature, it would probably be good 
              to look at the stiffness of the board. No extreme conditions are 
              needed for that. Also, we gave them the final list of materials 
              so that they could obtain stiffness constants and help us with the 
              mathematical equations for the behavior of the board.
   Tuesday, March 20thWe met with Nancy and went over the storyboard. From talking to 
              her, we realized that we were greatly overestimating our audience. 
              She stressed the fact that most of these students are socially promoted 
              7th graders,The example she gave was that she will give instructions with two 
              steps, and they find it difficult to follow even that. So we need 
              to make it very easy to follow.
 
              Nancy also suggested that we use very simple language, and record 
              voices to go with the text. Their reading skills are pretty low, 
              and English is not the first language of all of the students. We 
              decided that we would write up all the text and check it with Nancy 
              before fully implementing it.  
              When we told Nancy about the idea of dragging a magnifying glass 
              to an object to see its microstructure, she said this would be a 
              really good idea. The kids like to drag things. She also said that 
              she liked the hypothesis idea because it would allow kids to succeed 
              for breaking the board, and they would think that was cool. She 
              also said that she didn't think the idea of lots of checkboxes would 
              make much sense to these kids. While this program may be used for 
              other classes who would be able to use this functionality, we need 
              to focus on Nancy's kids and what is best for them.   Sunday, March 18thWe read all the feedback from our classmates and discussed improvements 
              that we could make. We decided that we should really talk to Nancy 
              more about what she would want out of the teacher mode. A very helpful 
              comment from most of the class was that we should really track students 
              progress by analyzing their hypotheses, not the height or success 
              of a particular jump. We stressed that we would like to teach kids 
              about variables, so they thought that the checkboxes available in 
              teacher mode should be accessible to the students as well.
 
              We also finalized the list of materials and choices that we would 
              have for the students. However, we wanted to talk to Janet and Brian 
              about the feasibility of changing the temperature at all. We realized 
              that most of the materials we are working with probably won't have 
              drastic differences in behavior except at extreme temperatures, 
              and this choice doesn't really make sense.   Friday, March 16thMary met with Janet and Brian and discussed the CD-ROM as well as 
              how the project was going. They gave valuable feedback as to possibilities. 
              They also said that they would talk to colleagues about pictures 
              of microstructures for us to use.
  Thursday, March 15thWe presented our storyboard in class. We got a lot of good feedback, 
              but were unable to read it all and process it until Sunday.
  Wednesday, March 14thWe finalized the storyboard and flowcharts in preparation for our 
              presentation.
  Friday, March 9thWe discussed the materials that we would be using, and we talked 
              about getting our storyboard together. We made a sketch of what 
              it would include, and started to make overheads for our presentation.
  Friday, March 2rdFriday, February 23We discussed challenges that we saw as we explored the tools and 
              their limitations. Paul mentioned that it would be necessary to 
              design our animation in parts in order to deal with many different 
              scenarios. We decided to continue familiarizing ourselves with Authorware 
              and Director. Also, Mary obtained a CD-ROM and textbooks from Janet 
              to see if they had images and information that would be useful for 
              our program.
 We discussed the storyboard and broke the project down into component parts.  We began to establish flowcharts 
			and the design for the project.  In order to better structure our introduction to Director and Authorware, our 
			tools of choice, Paul will design a mockup of the teacher's interface, Mary will work on the material laboratory, 
			and Richard will begin the pool interface.
 
			Friday, February 16The design and the storyboard can't be furthered much until the tools at our disposal are explored.  The Schank 
			and Cleary book, Engines for Eduction, seemed to reverberate among the group because it highlighted 
			so many aspects of our project of which we should keep aware.
 
			Tuesday, February 13Paul and Mary met with Prof. Rankin to visit Nancy Nowak and the middle school club.  Richard was five minutes 
			late, and missed the whole deal.  The kids had interesting ideas for types of materials with which to make a 
			diving board.  Ms. Nowak also noted that the kids seemed to have difficulty with the idea of variables, which 
			might somehow be highlighted in the program.
 
			Friday, February 9Our group finally met with Janet Rankin and Brian Sheldon, two Brown Engin professors in Materials Science.  
			They briefed us on what the kids were like, and their idea of what the project might entail.  Their thoughts 
			stemmed from The Incredible Machine, a game where users 
			create Rube Goldberg contraptions in order to achieve a goal, while battling against differing atmospheric 
			conditions and being constrained to a number of objects with different properties.  Paul is mainly concerned 
			with the design of the project, Mary is concerned with the program interface, and Richard is concerned about 
			how to effectively convey scientific principles.
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