Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification

Science educators recognize the need to teach scientific ways of knowing and reasoning in addition to scientific knowledge. However, characterizing and assessing scientific ways of knowing and reasoning is challenging. Writing-to-learn offers one way of eliciting and supporting students’ reasoning;...

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Published in:Chemistry Education Research and Practice
Main Authors: Moon, Alena, Moeller, Robert, Gere, Anne Ruggles, Shultz, Ginger V.
Other Authors: Division of Undergraduate Education
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9rp00005d
http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2019/RP/C9RP00005D
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spelling crroyalschem:10.1039/c9rp00005d 2024-05-19T07:46:32+00:00 Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification Moon, Alena Moeller, Robert Gere, Anne Ruggles Shultz, Ginger V. Division of Undergraduate Education 2019 http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9rp00005d http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2019/RP/C9RP00005D en eng Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC) http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use#chorus Chemistry Education Research and Practice volume 20, issue 3, page 484-494 ISSN 1109-4028 1756-1108 journal-article 2019 crroyalschem https://doi.org/10.1039/c9rp00005d 2024-04-25T08:01:38Z Science educators recognize the need to teach scientific ways of knowing and reasoning in addition to scientific knowledge. However, characterizing and assessing scientific ways of knowing and reasoning is challenging. Writing-to-learn offers one way of eliciting and supporting students’ reasoning; further, writing serves to externalize and make traceable students’ reasoning. For this reason, it is a useful formative assessment of scientific reasoning. The utility hinges on researchers’ ability to understand what students can do and think from their writing. Given the challenges in assessing students’ writing, this research offers an adapted framework for assessing students’ scientific reasoning evident in writing. This work will introduce an adapted framework and show an application to general chemistry students’ argumentative writing about ocean acidification. We provide evidence that this framework can be used to validly estimate the quality of students’ reasoning. We argue that this framework offers some affordances that overcome challenges reported in the literature. It serves to define scientific reasoning in a domain-general way by breaking it down into its components, but in a way that can produce a composite score that tells us about how students reason using chemistry content. Further, the framework provides a way to characterize the scientific accuracy of students’ reasoning that can inform instructors’ treatment of alternative conceptions. Article in Journal/Newspaper Ocean acidification Royal Society of Chemistry Chemistry Education Research and Practice 20 3 484 494
institution Open Polar
collection Royal Society of Chemistry
op_collection_id crroyalschem
language English
description Science educators recognize the need to teach scientific ways of knowing and reasoning in addition to scientific knowledge. However, characterizing and assessing scientific ways of knowing and reasoning is challenging. Writing-to-learn offers one way of eliciting and supporting students’ reasoning; further, writing serves to externalize and make traceable students’ reasoning. For this reason, it is a useful formative assessment of scientific reasoning. The utility hinges on researchers’ ability to understand what students can do and think from their writing. Given the challenges in assessing students’ writing, this research offers an adapted framework for assessing students’ scientific reasoning evident in writing. This work will introduce an adapted framework and show an application to general chemistry students’ argumentative writing about ocean acidification. We provide evidence that this framework can be used to validly estimate the quality of students’ reasoning. We argue that this framework offers some affordances that overcome challenges reported in the literature. It serves to define scientific reasoning in a domain-general way by breaking it down into its components, but in a way that can produce a composite score that tells us about how students reason using chemistry content. Further, the framework provides a way to characterize the scientific accuracy of students’ reasoning that can inform instructors’ treatment of alternative conceptions.
author2 Division of Undergraduate Education
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Moon, Alena
Moeller, Robert
Gere, Anne Ruggles
Shultz, Ginger V.
spellingShingle Moon, Alena
Moeller, Robert
Gere, Anne Ruggles
Shultz, Ginger V.
Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification
author_facet Moon, Alena
Moeller, Robert
Gere, Anne Ruggles
Shultz, Ginger V.
author_sort Moon, Alena
title Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification
title_short Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification
title_full Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification
title_fullStr Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification
title_full_unstemmed Application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification
title_sort application and testing of a framework for characterizing the quality of scientific reasoning in chemistry students' writing on ocean acidification
publisher Royal Society of Chemistry (RSC)
publishDate 2019
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1039/c9rp00005d
http://pubs.rsc.org/en/content/articlepdf/2019/RP/C9RP00005D
genre Ocean acidification
genre_facet Ocean acidification
op_source Chemistry Education Research and Practice
volume 20, issue 3, page 484-494
ISSN 1109-4028 1756-1108
op_rights http://rsc.li/journals-terms-of-use#chorus
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1039/c9rp00005d
container_title Chemistry Education Research and Practice
container_volume 20
container_issue 3
container_start_page 484
op_container_end_page 494
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