scholarly journals Effect of Open Inquiry Based Learning Approach on the Conceptual Understanding of Secondary School Students

Author(s):  
Ayberk Bostan SARIOGLAN ◽  
Yuksel CAN
2016 ◽  
Vol 17 (3) ◽  
pp. 523-531 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Pabuccu ◽  
S. Erduran

This study investigated secondary school students' engagement in epistemic and narrative practices of chemistry in the context of a chemistry story on gas behavior. Argumentation is an example of an epistemic practice in science and stories are one kind of narrative (Ricoeur, 1981). By using a chemistry story, the authors hoped to engage students in the argumentation processes by linking chemistry knowledge to everyday contexts (Erduran and Pabuccu, 2012). Student group discussions and written frames during the activity were used as data sources. Analysis of these student outcomes concentrated on (a) the nature of the students' discourse; (b) the quality of students' argumentation; and (c) students' conceptual understanding of gas behaviors. The authors categorized the nature of group discourse using five different codes, determined the quality of student argumentation by counting the number of rebuttals, and measured conceptual understanding through students' answers in the writing frames. The results of this study add to the literature seeking to understand how to develop students' engagement in the argumentation process, how to enhance the quality of students' argumentations, and how to improve their conceptual understanding of gas behaviors.


1993 ◽  
Vol 24 (5) ◽  
pp. 392-414
Author(s):  
Clifford Konold ◽  
Alexander Pollatsek ◽  
Arnold Well ◽  
Jill Lohmeier ◽  
Abigail Lipson

Subjects were asked to select from among four possible sequences the “most likely” to result from flipping a coin five times. Contrary to the results of Kahneman and Tversky (1972), the majority of subjects (72%) correctly answered that the sequences are equally likely to occur. This result suggests, as does performance on similar NAEP items, that most secondary school and college-age students view successive outcomes of a random process as independent. However, in a follow-up question, subjects were also asked to select the “least likely” result. Only half the subjects who had answered correctly responded again that the sequences were equally likely; the others selected one of the sequences as least likely. This result was replicated in a second study in which 20 subjects were interviewed as they solved the same problems. One account of these logically inconsistent responses is that subjects reason about the two questions from different perspectives. When asked to select the most likely outcome, some believe they are being asked to predict what actually will happen, and give the answer “equally likely” to indicate that all of the sequences are possible. This reasoning has been described by Konold (1989) as an “outcome approach” to uncertainty. This prediction scheme does not fit questions worded in terms of the least likely result, and thus some subjects select an incompatible answer based on “representativeness” (Kahneman & Tversky, 1972). These results suggest that the percentage of secondary school students who understand the concept of independence is much lower than the latest NAEP results would lead us to believe and, more generally, point to the difficulty of assessing conceptual understanding with multiple-choice items.


2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan-Philipp Burde ◽  
Thomas Wilhelm ◽  
Martin Hopf ◽  
Lana Ivanjek ◽  
Thomas Schubatzky ◽  
...  

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