Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study

Engaging the student's prior knowledge is considered by educational researchers to be an important part of constructing a strong foundation for new learning. Diagrams are one technique used in the classroom. Jill Larkin and Herbert Simon described the computational advantages of diagrams over t...

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Main Author: Conroy, Arthur Thomas III
Other Authors: Human Development
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/83831
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-838312020-09-29T05:30:44Z Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study Conroy, Arthur Thomas III Human Development Klunk, Clare D. Boucouvalas, Marcie Renard, Paul D. Morris, Linda E. Human Development Adult Learning Diagramming Prior Knowledge Student-Generated Constructivism Elicitation Engaging the student's prior knowledge is considered by educational researchers to be an important part of constructing a strong foundation for new learning. Diagrams are one technique used in the classroom. Jill Larkin and Herbert Simon described the computational advantages of diagrams over text when used to communicate information in their 1987 article entitled 'Why a Diagram is (Sometimes) Worth Ten Thousand Words.' This case study describes a novel abstract diagramming technique facilitated in four separate university classroom settings. Using paper and crayons, the students created three diagrams that represented the externalization of their unconscious perceptions of their own prior knowledge. The study illustrates how differences in prior knowledge can be visualized using diagrams with greater speed in less time than the traditional use of text-based descriptions. The use of the abstract diagramming technique led to an unexpected finding. The student diagrams were shown to contain a hidden conceptual topology, one that is described by Egenhofer in his 1991 article entitled 'Reasoning About Binary Topological Relations.' This topology is recommended as a framework for structuring and facilitating student collaboration and sharing of prior knowledge and new learning. The present study recommends the diagramming technique as the basis for the establishment of a standard diagram research framework that can be used across multiple research disciplines and subject domains. This dissertation describes a domain-general abstract diagram technique that can be adapted for domain-specific subjects and made operational using basic materials (paper and crayons). The study also describes the instructors' responses to questions about the diagram technique used in their classes. The case study offers recommendations for future diagram research. Ph. D. 2018-07-02T06:00:18Z 2018-07-02T06:00:18Z 2016-01-08 Dissertation vt_gsexam:7102 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/83831 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ ETD application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Human Development
Adult Learning
Diagramming
Prior Knowledge
Student-Generated
Constructivism
Elicitation
spellingShingle Human Development
Adult Learning
Diagramming
Prior Knowledge
Student-Generated
Constructivism
Elicitation
Conroy, Arthur Thomas III
Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study
description Engaging the student's prior knowledge is considered by educational researchers to be an important part of constructing a strong foundation for new learning. Diagrams are one technique used in the classroom. Jill Larkin and Herbert Simon described the computational advantages of diagrams over text when used to communicate information in their 1987 article entitled 'Why a Diagram is (Sometimes) Worth Ten Thousand Words.' This case study describes a novel abstract diagramming technique facilitated in four separate university classroom settings. Using paper and crayons, the students created three diagrams that represented the externalization of their unconscious perceptions of their own prior knowledge. The study illustrates how differences in prior knowledge can be visualized using diagrams with greater speed in less time than the traditional use of text-based descriptions. The use of the abstract diagramming technique led to an unexpected finding. The student diagrams were shown to contain a hidden conceptual topology, one that is described by Egenhofer in his 1991 article entitled 'Reasoning About Binary Topological Relations.' This topology is recommended as a framework for structuring and facilitating student collaboration and sharing of prior knowledge and new learning. The present study recommends the diagramming technique as the basis for the establishment of a standard diagram research framework that can be used across multiple research disciplines and subject domains. This dissertation describes a domain-general abstract diagram technique that can be adapted for domain-specific subjects and made operational using basic materials (paper and crayons). The study also describes the instructors' responses to questions about the diagram technique used in their classes. The case study offers recommendations for future diagram research. === Ph. D.
author2 Human Development
author_facet Human Development
Conroy, Arthur Thomas III
author Conroy, Arthur Thomas III
author_sort Conroy, Arthur Thomas III
title Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study
title_short Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study
title_full Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study
title_fullStr Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study
title_full_unstemmed Diagramming Prior Knowledge in the Classroom: A Case Study
title_sort diagramming prior knowledge in the classroom: a case study
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2018
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/83831
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