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Investigating teachers' understanding and diagnosis of students' preconceptions in the secondary science classroom

A large amount of research has been conducted that establishes that students
of all ages hold conceptions about a variety of science topics that are not in line
with accepted scientific beliefs. These preconceptions have been identified in a
variety of ways in research situations; this study focused on how secondary science
teachers actually attempt to diagnose students' preconceptions in the classroom and
the understanding the teachers have about these preconceptions. The use the
teachers made of any information gathered in a diagnosis and the reasons for a lack
of diagnosis were also investigated.
Four experienced science teachers were studied in depth, they were
interviewed three times and classroom observations were conducted for nine
weeks. The teachers' classroom practices, questioning techniques, understanding of
students' preconceptions, and assessment of students' understanding were all
analyzed.
In this study, the teachers did not use any formal strategies for diagnosing
students' preconceptions such as concept mapping, interviews, journals, or writing
prompts. The teachers studied claimed that it was important to conduct diagnosis
but only one teacher was seen to actually do so. The teacher who did use class
discussions as a strategy for diagnosis was the most experienced teacher of the four
and also the teacher with the strongest subject matter background. The other three
teachers all claimed that they did do diagnosis of preconceptions by questioning
their students but they were not seen to do this in their classes.
The conclusions from these results are that the teachers did not have a
complete understanding of the concept of diagnosing students' preconceptions in
order to use that information to attempt conceptual change. The teachers' beliefs
were not consistent with their practices in this situation; they may have had certain
constraints on them that inhibited the translation of their beliefs into practice.
The implications are that preservice and inservice teachers may need to be
trained about the importance of, the strategies involved with, and the justification
for diagnosing students' preconceptions in the regular classroom environment.
Teachers must have an understanding of students' preconceptions and the effect
they have on students' learning. / Graduation date: 1999

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:ORGSU/oai:ir.library.oregonstate.edu:1957/33374
Date05 May 1999
CreatorsMorrison, Judith A.
ContributorsLederman, Norman G.
Source SetsOregon State University
Languageen_US
Detected LanguageEnglish
TypeThesis/Dissertation

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