Characteristics and functions of sixteen-year-old students’ collaborative deliberation when working with socioscientific inquiry assignments

2015 ◽  
Vol 4 (2) ◽  
pp. 200-231
Author(s):  
Anne Kristine Byhring

In these student dialogues, deliberative aspects of argumentation in SSI inquiry are documented as different from strictly scientific argumentation. I suggest that deliberative argumentation is a complex alternation between reasoning patterns that relate to different activity layers. This understanding of deliberative argumentation emerged when analyzing students’ dialogues, developing the categories theme (theoria), inquiry (praxis) and inscribing (poeisis). Analyses are presented to account for this emerging understanding. The analyses utilize social functional linguistics (SFL), pragmatic conversation analysis, and rhetorical approaches to argumentation. What characterizes the students’ oral deliberation is an alternation between certain foci. Roberts’s (2011) use the terms theoria, praxis, and techne to characterize similar reasoning patterns in his Vision 1 and 2 of scientific literacy. I suggest that in civic deliberation all patterns of reasoning are necessary to handle SSI, whereas in strictly scientific argumentation, theoria is dominant. Such distinctions should also be considered when analyzing and developing instructional strategies.

2016 ◽  
Vol 78 (1) ◽  
pp. 49-56 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joseph A. Harsh ◽  
Mikaela Schmitt-Harsh

Given the importance of succinctly communicating complex information, proficiency in graphing is a central element of scientific literacy. Evidence indicates that learners of all ages and levels of expertise have difficulties in displaying and reading visual data. Numerous studies have investigated the enactment of various activities to improve graphing in the college science classroom, but most of this work has focused on graphing difficulties and the implications of general instructional strategies as part of a semester-long curriculum. Few studies have discussed how specific interventions can be implemented to effectively hone graphing abilities. We evaluated (1) five key instructional features of an inquiry-oriented stream-ecology unit that consisted of data collection and graphing and (2) the unit's impact on non–science majors' analytical skills. Comparing pretest and posttest data, as well as a supplemental questionnaire, student responses demonstrated substantial positive impacts on graphing skills and attitudes toward graphing. The results also highlighted features of the unit that were considered successful. Although we a describe a particular stream-ecology activity, the framework and design features we present can be applied to other case studies and across disciplines.


2000 ◽  
Vol 29 (3) ◽  
pp. 409-412
Author(s):  
Don H. Zimmerman

This volume encompasses work by researchers from three distinct but related areas of inquiry: functional linguistics, linguistic anthropology, and conversation analysis. Edited collections sometimes strain to provide a unifying theme connecting diverse contributions into a coherent whole. Happily, the editors and contributors to Interaction and grammar (the list of authors is impressive) have to a large extent solved this problem; and in the process, they have provided an important contribution that should have major impact in all three areas.


Practicing scientific argumentation is believed capable of nurturing higher order thinking and scientific literacy among students. Yet, it has not been well practiced as evidenced by typical classroom teaching activity. The purpose of this research is, to study the practice of scientific argumentation among chemistry teachers through the argument level and classroom verbal interaction pattern. Four chemistry teachers and their students from Johor Bahru, a district of Johor was selected as the participants of this qualitative research. Five observations for each teacher had been conducted and observation become the principal method of data collection. Findings shows that the scientific argumentation being constructed in class was only at Level 1 (7%), Level 2 (54%) and Level 3 (39%). No higher and complex argumentations were found. Two interaction patterns, Initiation-Response-Evaluation/Feedback (IRE/IRF) (18%) and Initiation-Response-Feedback-Response-Feedback (IRFRF) (82%) were detected when teacher were practicing scientific argumentation. The interaction pattern practices, IRFRF is good, yet the argumentation being constructed is still at low level as higher argumentation seems to be beyond the samples’ ability. A further research probing into how IRFRF interaction pattern can be further enhanced to nurture complex argumentation is needed.


2009 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 13.1-13.17 ◽  
Author(s):  
David Caldwell

This paper explores the language used by Australian Football League (AFL) footballers and Australian Broadcast Corporation (ABC) journalists in their post-match interviews broadcast on ABC (774 Melbourne) radio. From Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), Appraisal is used to investigate the evaluative language expressed by the AFL footballers in their exchanges with ABC journalists. Despite the many applications of linguistics to media discourse, especially within SFL, this research is the first to analyse the language of Australian athletes in their post-match interviews. It is found that irrespective of the result of the game, ABC journalists and AFL footballers maintain a neutral stance by countering expressions of positive Attitude with negative Attitude, as well as employing Graduation and Engagement resources that reduce authorial endorsement. These findings are summarized and discussed, including reference to neutralism from Conversation Analysis. The paper goes on to claim that the tenor between AFL footballers, ABC journalists and the broadcast audience makes it difficult for AFL footballers to express authoritative evaluations. The ultimate aim is to show that AFL footballers do well to negotiate a particularly challenging register.


2009 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 13.1-13.17
Author(s):  
ZZZ dummy contact - do not alter

This paper explores the language used by Australian Football League (AFL) footballers and Australian Broadcast Corporation (ABC) journalists in their post-match interviews broadcast on ABC (774 Melbourne) radio. From Systemic Functional Linguistics (SFL), Appraisal is used to investigate the evaluative language expressed by the AFL footballers in their exchanges with ABC journalists. Despite the many applications of linguistics to media discourse, especially within SFL, this research is the first to analyse the language of Australian athletes in their post-match interviews. It is found that irrespective of the result of the game, ABC journalists and AFL footballers maintain a neutral stance by countering expressions of positive Attitude with negative Attitude, as well as employing Graduation and Engagement resources that reduce authorial endorsement. These findings are summarized and discussed, including reference to neutralism from Conversation Analysis. The paper goes on to claim that the tenor between AFL footballers, ABC journalists and the broadcast audience makes it difficult for AFL footballers to express authoritative evaluations. The ultimate aim is to show that AFL footballers do well to negotiate a particularly challenging register.


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