When Science Is Taught This Way, Students Become Critical Friends: Setting The Stage For Student Teachers
Abstract
Efective science education draws on many diferent ways of teaching science. The literature on science education documents some potential benefts of argumentation instruction as a powerful tool for learning science and maintaining wonder and curiosity in the
classroom. Unlike expository teaching, which relies on a teacher-driven pedagogy in which
students accept the teacher’s authority over any content to be justifed a priori, argumentation teaching allows students to focus on the importance of high-quality evidence for
epistemic knowledge, reasoning, and justifcation. Using a quasi-experimental design, two
study groups of undergraduate student teachers were exposed to two diferent learning conditions, the Exp-group with dialogic argumentation instruction (DAI) and the Ctrl-group
with expository instruction. Each group received the same science content twice a week for
12 weeks (2 h per lesson). Pre- and posttests were administered to collect data. One-way
MANCOVA with the pretest results as covariates showed that the instructional approaches
(Wilk’s Λ=0.765, p<0.001) had a signifcant efect on the tested variables after the intervention. A pairwise comparison of performance indices between the two study groups
revealed that the exp-group was better able to evaluate alternative solutions and defend
arguments for collaborative consensus on unstructured scientifc problems. This suggests
that dialogic argumentation instruction can be used to help students improve their scientifc
reasoning, thinking, and argumentation skills, which are required to solve problems involving scientifc phenomena.
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