Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment

The nature of this study was to explore changes in beliefs and lay a foundation for focusing on more specific features of reasoning related to personal epistemological and NOS beliefs in light of specific science laboratory instructional pedagogical practices (e.g., pre- and post- laboratory activit...

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Main Author: Keen-Rocha, Linda S
Format: Others
Published: Scholar Commons 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/327
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1326&context=etd
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spelling ndltd-USF-oai-scholarcommons.usf.edu-etd-13262019-10-04T05:16:50Z Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment Keen-Rocha, Linda S The nature of this study was to explore changes in beliefs and lay a foundation for focusing on more specific features of reasoning related to personal epistemological and NOS beliefs in light of specific science laboratory instructional pedagogical practices (e.g., pre- and post- laboratory activities, laboratory work) for future research. This research employed a mixed methodology, foregrounding qualitative data. The total population consisted of 56 students enrolled in several sections of a general chemistry laboratory course, with the qualitative analysis focusing on the in-depth interviews. A quantitative NOS and epistemological beliefs measure was administered pre- and post-instruction. These measures were triangulated with pre-post interviews to assure the rigor of the descriptions generated. Although little quantitative change in NOS was observed from the pre-post NSKS assessment a more noticeable qualitative change was reflected by the participants during their final interviews. The NSKS results: the mean gain scores for the overall score and all dimensions, except for amoral were found to be significant at p < [or] = .05. However there was a more moderate change in the populations' broader epistemological beliefs (EBAPS) which was supported during the final interviews. The EBAPS results: the mean gain scores for the overall score and all dimensions, except for the source of ability to learn were found to be significant at p < [or] = .05. The participants' identified the laboratory work as the most effective instructional feature followed by the post-laboratory activities. The pre-laboratory was identified as being the least effective feature. The participants suggested the laboratory work offered real-life experiences, group discussions, and teamwork which added understanding and meaning to their learning. The post-laboratory was viewed as necessary in tying all the information together and being able to see the bigger picture. What one cannot infer at this point is whether these belief changes and beliefs about laboratory instruction are enduring or whether some participants are simply more adaptable than others are to the learning environment. More research studies are needed to investigate the effects of laboratory instruction on student beliefs and understanding. 2008-05-09T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/327 https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1326&amp;context=etd default Graduate Theses and Dissertations Scholar Commons Chemistry education Laboratory instruction Microcomputer-based Pedagogy Intellectual development student images American Studies Arts and Humanities
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Chemistry education
Laboratory instruction
Microcomputer-based
Pedagogy
Intellectual development
student images
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
spellingShingle Chemistry education
Laboratory instruction
Microcomputer-based
Pedagogy
Intellectual development
student images
American Studies
Arts and Humanities
Keen-Rocha, Linda S
Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment
description The nature of this study was to explore changes in beliefs and lay a foundation for focusing on more specific features of reasoning related to personal epistemological and NOS beliefs in light of specific science laboratory instructional pedagogical practices (e.g., pre- and post- laboratory activities, laboratory work) for future research. This research employed a mixed methodology, foregrounding qualitative data. The total population consisted of 56 students enrolled in several sections of a general chemistry laboratory course, with the qualitative analysis focusing on the in-depth interviews. A quantitative NOS and epistemological beliefs measure was administered pre- and post-instruction. These measures were triangulated with pre-post interviews to assure the rigor of the descriptions generated. Although little quantitative change in NOS was observed from the pre-post NSKS assessment a more noticeable qualitative change was reflected by the participants during their final interviews. The NSKS results: the mean gain scores for the overall score and all dimensions, except for amoral were found to be significant at p < [or] = .05. However there was a more moderate change in the populations' broader epistemological beliefs (EBAPS) which was supported during the final interviews. The EBAPS results: the mean gain scores for the overall score and all dimensions, except for the source of ability to learn were found to be significant at p < [or] = .05. The participants' identified the laboratory work as the most effective instructional feature followed by the post-laboratory activities. The pre-laboratory was identified as being the least effective feature. The participants suggested the laboratory work offered real-life experiences, group discussions, and teamwork which added understanding and meaning to their learning. The post-laboratory was viewed as necessary in tying all the information together and being able to see the bigger picture. What one cannot infer at this point is whether these belief changes and beliefs about laboratory instruction are enduring or whether some participants are simply more adaptable than others are to the learning environment. More research studies are needed to investigate the effects of laboratory instruction on student beliefs and understanding.
author Keen-Rocha, Linda S
author_facet Keen-Rocha, Linda S
author_sort Keen-Rocha, Linda S
title Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment
title_short Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment
title_full Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment
title_fullStr Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment
title_full_unstemmed Personal Epistemological Growth in a College Chemistry Laboratory Environment
title_sort personal epistemological growth in a college chemistry laboratory environment
publisher Scholar Commons
publishDate 2008
url https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/etd/327
https://scholarcommons.usf.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1326&amp;context=etd
work_keys_str_mv AT keenrochalindas personalepistemologicalgrowthinacollegechemistrylaboratoryenvironment
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