Hayes Brett K, Goodhew Alison, Heit Evan, Gillan Joanna
School of Psychology, University of New South Wales, Sydney, NSW 2052, Australia.
J Exp Child Psychol. 2003 Dec;86(4):253-76. doi: 10.1016/j.jecp.2003.09.002.
This study examined how a fundamental principle of induction and scientific reasoning, information diversity, could be used to promote change in children's mental models of the earth's shape. Six-year-old children (N=132) were randomly allocated to a control or to one of two training conditions. Some training groups received instruction that simultaneously challenged children's beliefs concerning (a) why the earth appears flat to a surface observer and (b) the role of gravity. Others received instruction that repeatedly challenged only one of these beliefs. An adaptation of the Vosniadou and Brewer (1992, Cognitive Psychology 24, 535-585) protocol for identifying mental models of the earth was administered before and after instruction. Both instruction methods produced increases in factual knowledge. Only children receiving instruction about two core beliefs, however, showed an increased rate of acceptance of a spherical earth model at posttest. The findings show that instruction that challenges diverse aspects of children's naïve scientific beliefs is more likely to produce conceptual change.
本研究探讨了归纳与科学推理的一项基本原则——信息多样性,如何能够用于促进儿童对地球形状心理模型的转变。132名6岁儿童被随机分配至一个控制组或两种训练条件之一。一些训练组接受的指导同时挑战了儿童关于以下两方面的信念:(a)为何地球在地面观察者看来是平的;(b)重力的作用。其他训练组接受的指导仅反复挑战其中一种信念。在指导前后,采用了Vosniadou和Brewer(1992年,《认知心理学》第24卷,第535 - 585页)识别地球心理模型的方案。两种指导方法都使事实性知识有所增加。然而,只有接受关于两个核心信念指导的儿童在测试后表现出接受球形地球模型的比例有所提高。研究结果表明,挑战儿童朴素科学信念不同方面的指导更有可能产生概念转变。