"How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy

This study investigated the participant structure and content of discourse in five high-school science classrooms and their connection to scientifically literate practices for talking, reasoning, and evaluating claims. Through a detailed exploration of the way teachers introduced classes to the topi...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Freeman, Jennifer Lynn
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26514
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spelling ndltd-UTEXAS-oai-repositories.lib.utexas.edu-2152-265142015-09-20T17:27:14Z"How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacyFreeman, Jennifer LynnDiscourseScientific literacyControversial topicsEvolutionScience instructionInteractionFraming scienceThis study investigated the participant structure and content of discourse in five high-school science classrooms and their connection to scientifically literate practices for talking, reasoning, and evaluating claims. Through a detailed exploration of the way teachers introduced classes to the topic of evolution, I was able to examine how teachers used language to build a social framework for participation, examined the opportunities and challenges stemming from their various approaches, and explored how the structure and content of classroom talk contributed to framing science. This study used techniques from interactional sociolinguistics and conversational analysis to examine videos of interaction in five secondary biology classrooms on the day teachers introduced their students to lessons focused on the topic of evolution. Implications of this study focus on how teacher's discourse moves could open or close a discussion to student knowledge contributions, and emphasize how open discussions offer both challenges and opportunities to teachers wishing to facilitate scientifically literate discourse practices in their classroom.text2014-10-14T14:49:31Z2014-052014-10-14May 20142014-10-14T14:49:31ZThesisapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/2152/26514en
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Discourse
Scientific literacy
Controversial topics
Evolution
Science instruction
Interaction
Framing science
spellingShingle Discourse
Scientific literacy
Controversial topics
Evolution
Science instruction
Interaction
Framing science
Freeman, Jennifer Lynn
"How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy
description This study investigated the participant structure and content of discourse in five high-school science classrooms and their connection to scientifically literate practices for talking, reasoning, and evaluating claims. Through a detailed exploration of the way teachers introduced classes to the topic of evolution, I was able to examine how teachers used language to build a social framework for participation, examined the opportunities and challenges stemming from their various approaches, and explored how the structure and content of classroom talk contributed to framing science. This study used techniques from interactional sociolinguistics and conversational analysis to examine videos of interaction in five secondary biology classrooms on the day teachers introduced their students to lessons focused on the topic of evolution. Implications of this study focus on how teacher's discourse moves could open or close a discussion to student knowledge contributions, and emphasize how open discussions offer both challenges and opportunities to teachers wishing to facilitate scientifically literate discourse practices in their classroom. === text
author Freeman, Jennifer Lynn
author_facet Freeman, Jennifer Lynn
author_sort Freeman, Jennifer Lynn
title "How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy
title_short "How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy
title_full "How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy
title_fullStr "How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy
title_full_unstemmed "How do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy
title_sort "how do you know god didn't start the universe and blow it up?" : using classroom talk and controversy to support scientific literacy
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/2152/26514
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