학술논문

Discourse Remixed: Shifting Science Learning through Talk
Document Type
Journal Articles
Reports - Research
Author
Premo, Joshua (ORCID 0000-0001-6739-4479); Cavagnetto, AndyCollins, LarryDavis, William B.Offerdahl, Erika (ORCID 0000-0002-4336-6497)
Source
Journal of Experimental Education. 2023 91(2):336-357.
Subject
Undergraduate Students
College Science
Science Education
Cooperative Learning
Discourse Analysis
Science Process Skills
Science Achievement
Accuracy
Science Laboratories
Introductory Courses
Biology
Group Discussion
Language
English
ISSN
0022-0973
1940-0683
Abstract
Increasing student engagement with the social practices of science (i.e., communication, collaboration, and critique) is a goal throughout K-16 science education and provides an opportunity for science educators to leverage student discourse to optimize learning. Yet how instructors can encourage forms of discourse which predict increased achievement remain unclear. We examined how structured interdependence shifted student discourse and learning for student groups (n = 78) completing collaborative learning activities in undergraduate science classrooms. All discourse was recorded (3,628 student talk turns) and coded. Results showed that groups experiencing structured interdependence had higher rates of science accuracy, idea reiteration, and justification, as well as higher assessment performance. An additional examination of discourse found accuracy and justification of ideas to have greater presence in the highest performing groups overall. The "in common" nature of discourse shifts between both interdependency groups and those with the highest performance suggest that interdependent structuring may promote learning through shifting idea accuracy and justification during talk. These findings support that interdependency may be a pragmatic step for increasing undergraduate student engagement with social practices of science in laboratory settings.