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Kason Ka Ching Cheung; Alis Oancea; Sibel Erduran – Science Education, 2025
Students' understanding of nature of science (NOS) has been largely examined primarily in written or verbal modes. The visual, verbal, and written modes are essential for students' meaning-making of NOS. However, research has sidelined the interaction among these three modes in understanding students' collaborative discourse of NOS. Informed by…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Learning Modalities, Scientific Principles, Grade 7
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Kok-Sing Tang – Science Education, 2024
Research in languages and literacies in science education (LLSE) has developed substantial theoretical and pedagogical insights into how students learn science through language, discourse, and multimodal representations. At the same time, language is central to the functioning of generative artificial intelligence (GenAI). On this common basis…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Meta Analysis, Science Education, Language Usage
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Park, Joonhyeong; Tang, Kok-Sing; Chang, Jina – Science Education, 2021
The use of group drawing to promote student-generated representation is a common instructional strategy as it combines the benefits of using visual representation and collaborative talk. Although the affordances of group drawing have increasingly been emphasized in science education, few studies have investigated how drawing as a visual mode…
Descriptors: Freehand Drawing, Teaching Methods, Group Activities, Verbal Communication
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Brett Criswell; Kadir Demir; Michelle Zoss – Science Education, 2025
This qualitative case study delved into students' understanding and positioning while they participated in solving an authentic, conceptually-based problem in a high-school chemistry class. Verbal and nonverbal cues, particularly gestures, offered broader awareness of students' engagement in sensemaking during the learning experience. The…
Descriptors: High School Students, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Student Attitudes
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Phelan, Siëlle; Specht, Inga; Schnotz, Wolfgang; Lewalter, Doris – Science Education, 2017
Visitors to modern science museums are likely to encounter exhibitions presenting conflicting information, such as risks and benefits of new scientific developments. Such exhibitions encourage visitors to reflect upon different sides of a story and to form or adjust their attitudes toward the topic on display. However, there is very little…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Scientific Attitudes, Science Teaching Centers, Museums
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Wilson, Amy Alexandra – Science Education, 2013
Framed in theories of social semiotics, this multiple case study describes and categorizes the actional-operational modes used by three middle school earth science teachers throughout the course of one school year. Data included fieldnotes, photographs, and video recordings of classroom instructions as well as periodic interviews with the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Earth Science, Middle School Teachers, Secondary School Science
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Hatzinikita, Vassilia; Dimopoulos, Kostas; Christidou, Vasilia – Science Education, 2008
The paper compares the nature of the textual construction of the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) science test items and the Greek school science textbooks. This nature is determined by the interplay of the notions of classification (content specialization) and formality (code specialization) modulated by both the linguistic…
Descriptors: Visual Aids, Specialization, Test Construction, Comparative Analysis
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Pozzer-Ardenghi, Lilian; Roth, Wolff-Michael – Science Education, 2007
When lecturing, teachers make use of both verbal and nonverbal communication. What is called teaching, therefore, involves not only the words and sentences a teacher utters and writes on the board during a lesson, but also all the hands/arms gestures, body movements, and facial expressions a teacher "performs" in the classroom. All of these…
Descriptors: Position Papers, Human Body, Nonverbal Communication, Lecture Method
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Rahm, Jrene – Science Education, 2004
In this paper, I address some of the unique challenges of studies of learning in museums through a microanalytic case study of meaning-making among a group of youth and a curator. Through an examination of youths' forms of participation in one exhibit, I illustrate local meaning making achieved through multiple modalities--by doing, talking, and…
Descriptors: Exhibits, Scientific Literacy, Museums, Case Studies
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Okebukola, Peter Akinsola; Jegede, Olugbemiro J. – Science Education, 1988
Describes a study designed to compare student success in a concept mapping exercise with the cognitive preference of the student, and to determine whether students achieve better using individualistic or cooperative learning modes in the concept mapping exercise. Discusses the background, methodology and results. (CW)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Style, Concept Formation