scholarly journals Diachronic and Synchronic Indexing: Modeling Conceptual Change in Indexing Languages

Author(s):  
Joseph T Tennis

This paper outlines a model of conceptual change in indexing languages. Findings from this modeling effort point to three ways meaning and relationships are established and then change in an indexing language. These ways: structural, terminological, and textual point to ways indexing language metadata can aid in managing conceptual change in indexing languages.Cette communication esquisse un modèle du changement conceptuel des langages d’indexation. Les résultats de cette tentative de modélisation convergent vers une triple dimension. Les relations sont établies, puis modifiées dans un langage d’indexation. Ces dimensions, structurelle, terminologique et textuelle, indiquent de quelle manière les langages de métadonnées peuvent contribuer à la gestion du changement conceptuel des langages d’indexation. 


Author(s):  
Andrew B Leger ◽  
Sue Fostaty Young

This paper reports on the effects of a graduate course on teaching and learning on graduate teaching assistants’ conceptions of teaching and on the teaching philosophy statements that arose from those conceptions. Effects are interpreted from three perspectives: 1) course facilitators' reports of their perceptions of course participants’ conceptual change; 2) an independent assessors' ratings of the evidence of change through blind review of course participants’ initial philosophy statements and final statements; and 3) participants' own perceptions of change and identification of the course components and learning activities that were most significant in their conceptual development. Findings suggest that graduate teaching assistants’ perceptions of conceptual change differ significantly from those of both the course facilitators and the independent assessor. Cet article présente un rapport concernant les effets d’un cours supérieur portant sur l’enseignement et l’apprentissage sur les conceptions relatives à l’enseignement d’assistants d’enseignement diplômés et sur les exposés sur la philosophie d’enseignement qui ont découlé de ces conceptions. Les effets sont interprétés à partir de trois perspectives : 1) les rapports des facilitateurs du cours concernant leurs perceptions du changement conceptuel survenu parmi les participants; 2) l’évaluation d’un assesseur indépendant concernant l’évidence du changement par le biais d’un examen aveugle des exposés initiaux sur la philosophie d’enseignement des participants ainsi que de leurs exposés finaux; et 3) les perceptions personnelles des participants concernant le changement et l’identification des composantes du cours et des activités d’apprentissage qui ont été les plus significatives pour leur développement conceptuel. Les résultats suggèrent que les perceptions des assistants d’enseignement diplômés concernant le changement conceptuel diffèrent grandement de celles des facilitateurs du cours et de celles de l’assesseur indépendant.



2013 ◽  
Author(s):  
Benjamin C. Heddy ◽  
Gale M. Sinatra ◽  
Robert Danielson ◽  
Jesse Graham


1995 ◽  
Vol 62 (3) ◽  
pp. 357-369 ◽  
Author(s):  
Frank Arntzenius
Keyword(s):  




1999 ◽  
Vol 83 (3) ◽  
pp. 275-307 ◽  
Author(s):  
Robin Marion ◽  
Peter W. Hewson ◽  
B. Robert Tabachnick ◽  
Kathryn B. Blomker


Author(s):  
Rebecca L. Hite

Abstract One of the most fundamental understandings within biology is evolution, yet often ascribed as one of the most misunderstood scientific concepts by the American public. Despite not being explicitly mentioned in most American science standards, human evolution is nevertheless taught as an engaging context for understanding complex evolutionary processes among pre-college science students. Therefore, pre-college science teachers seek out human evolution content experts (e.g., Smithsonian Institution, NOVA, ENSI) to procure curricula (lesson plans) to teach these concepts in their classrooms. For students to accurately understand human evolution, research recommends lesson plans employ a diversity of direct and indirect evolutionary evidence, infused with social science perspectives related to the nature of science (NOS) and/or socioscientific issues (SSI) to foster necessary conceptual change. Given such empirical affordances of using multiple sources of evidence and integrated social science perspectives to foster conceptual change in teaching human evolution, it is unknown to what extent these attributes are present in lesson plans created by these entities and targeted to pre-college science teachers. To ascertain to what extent pre-college lesson plans on human evolution employ these research-based best practices, this paper analyzed 86 lesson plans created by 18 entities with content expertise in human evolution concepts that had developed online pre-college lesson plans. Among the sampled lesson plans, less than one third (29%) presented a combination of direct and indirect evidence. Further, a mere 17% incorporated elements of NOS, where SSI (like historical (n = 3) and racial (n = 1)) perspectives were fewer. In sum, findings suggest available resources are deficient in fostering the conceptual change necessary for pre-college students to fully understand human evolution concepts. This study evidences a continued need to ensure best practices are incorporated into human evolution lesson plans created for pre-college teachers.



2021 ◽  
Vol 19 (2) ◽  
pp. 100460
Author(s):  
Lauri-Matti Palmunen ◽  
Timo Lainema ◽  
Elina Pelto


2008 ◽  
Vol 92 (2) ◽  
pp. 278-296 ◽  
Author(s):  
Derek A. Muller ◽  
Manjula D. Sharma ◽  
Peter Reimann


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