Difference between revisions of "Karlsson2013"

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|Title=Agreed Discoveries: Students' Negotiations in a Virtual Laboratory Experiment
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|Tag(s)=EMCA; virtual laboratory work; concept of gas solubility in water; discovery learning; scientific reasoning; collaborative negotiating
 
|Tag(s)=EMCA; virtual laboratory work; concept of gas solubility in water; discovery learning; scientific reasoning; collaborative negotiating
 
|Key=Karlsson2013
 
|Key=Karlsson2013

Latest revision as of 07:40, 4 December 2019

Karlsson2013
BibType ARTICLE
Key Karlsson2013
Author(s) Göran Karlsson, Jonas Ivarsson, Berner Lindström
Title Agreed discoveries: students' negotiations in a virtual laboratory experiment
Editor(s)
Tag(s) EMCA, virtual laboratory work, concept of gas solubility in water, discovery learning, scientific reasoning, collaborative negotiating
Publisher
Year 2013
Language
City
Month
Journal Instructional Science
Volume 41
Number 3
Pages 455–480
URL Link
DOI 10.1007/s11251-012-9238-1
ISBN
Organization
Institution
School
Type
Edition
Series
Howpublished
Book title
Chapter

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Abstract

This paper presents an analysis of the scientific reasoning of a dyad of secondary school students about the phenomenon of dissolution of gases in water as they work on this in a simulated laboratory experiment. A web-based virtual laboratory was developed to provide learners with the opportunity to examine the influence of physical factors on gas solubility in water. An evaluation process involving 180 students revealed that the concepts connected to the dissolution of gas in water caused problems for the students even after having experimented with the virtual laboratory. To investigate the nature of learners’ reasoning about the visualised events, 13 video-recorded groups of learners were analysed. This study follows the reasoning of one group that displayed a possibly productive way of solving the problem. The results address the students’ general difficulty of discovering something that they are conceptually unprepared for within the virtual laboratory. The analysis shows how the students eventually found a way out of their dilemma by making an analogy with other dissolving processes. In effect, the analysis elucidates some of the analytical work that had to be done by the participants when collaboratively negotiating a shared meaning of a scientific concept in concord with a given task and set of instructional materials. Implications for design might be to provide the learning material with explicit hints that enable students to connect to specific phenomena related to the one investigated concept. The findings show the usefulness of video analytic research, informed by CA and ethnomethodology. This analytical framework can support design processes and provide useful information, which might identify hurdles to learning a scientific concept by simulated events and pathways to overcome these hurdles.

Notes