Making Meaning in Classrooms: Social Processes in Small-Group Discourse and Scientific Knowledge Building

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Abstract

This study analyzed student talk in working during four laboratory investigations. Its purpose was to understand the process by which students solve scientific problems, the diffculties students encounter in developing the requisite pieces of scientific arguments while negotiating their social roles, and the ways these roles shape task engagement and the development and articulation of the arguments themselves. The discourse of 6 groups of four students each was audiotaped and 2 groups were videotaped during the planning, execution, and interpretation of student-designed experiments in 10th-grade interdisciplinary science class. Goals of student engagement, knowledge building within an intellectual framework, and construction of scientific arguments were used to examine conceptual difficulties and social interactions. Within-group comparisons across labs and across-group comparisons within labs were made. It was determined that: (a) students became much better at using the scientific method to construct convincing arguments, and (b) specific social roles and leadership styles developed within groups that greatly influenced the ease with which students developed scientific understanding. The results demonstrate not only that knowledge building involves the construction of scientifically appropriate arguments, but that the extent to which this knowledge building takes place depends on students learning to use tools of the scientific community; their expectations about the intellectual nature of the tasks and their role in carrying these tasks out; and access they have to the appropriate social context in which to practice developing skills.

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APA

Richmond, G., & Striley, J. (1996). Making Meaning in Classrooms: Social Processes in Small-Group Discourse and Scientific Knowledge Building. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 33(8), 839–858. https://doi.org/10.1002/(SICI)1098-2736(199610)33:8<839::AID-TEA2>3.0.CO;2-X

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