Hoskins Sally G, Gottesman Alan J
Biology Department, City College of the City University of New York, New York, NY 10031.
J Microbiol Biol Educ. 2018 Feb 16;19(1). doi: 10.1128/jmbe.v19i1.1440. eCollection 2018.
Many science educators agree that 21 century students need to develop mature scientific thinking skills. Unsurprisingly, students' and experts' perceptions about the nature of scientific knowledge differ. Moreover, students' naïve and entrenched epistemologies can preclude their development toward "thinking like scientists." Novel teaching approaches that guide students toward more mature perceptions may be needed to support their development of scientific thinking skills. To address such issues, physics educators developed the Colorado Learning Attitudes About Science Survey (CLASS), subsequently adapted for chemistry and biology. These surveys are "designed to compare novice and expert perceptions about the content and structure of a specific discipline; the source of knowledge about that discipline, including connection of the discipline to the real world; and problem-solving approaches" (Semsar , CBE Life Sci. Educ. 10:268-278; p 269). We used CLASS-Bio to track students' perceptions of science in separate first-year and upper-level CREATE (Consider, Read, Elucidate hypotheses, Analyze and interpret the data, Think of the next Experiment) electives, hypothesizing that perceptions would become significantly more expert-like across a semester. Both first-year and upper-level cohorts made significant expert-like shifts. Students also made significant critical thinking gains in CREATE courses. Our findings of more mature, expert-like perceptions of science post-course contrast with those of previous studies, where students' thinking became significantly less expert-like across a term of introductory instruction and changed little in upper-level biology electives. Augmenting traditional biology curricula with CREATE courses could be an economical way to help undergraduates develop more mature views of science.
许多科学教育工作者都认为,21世纪的学生需要培养成熟的科学思维能力。不出所料,学生和专家对科学知识本质的看法存在差异。此外,学生天真且根深蒂固的认识论可能会阻碍他们向“像科学家一样思考”的方向发展。可能需要新颖的教学方法来引导学生形成更成熟的认知,以支持他们科学思维能力的发展。为了解决这些问题,物理教育工作者开发了科罗拉多州科学学习态度调查(CLASS),随后该调查被改编用于化学和生物学领域。这些调查“旨在比较新手和专家对特定学科的内容和结构、该学科知识的来源(包括该学科与现实世界的联系)以及解决问题的方法的看法”(塞姆萨尔,《CBE生命科学教育》10:268 - 278;第269页)。我们使用生物版的CLASS来追踪学生在单独开设的一年级和高年级的CREATE(思考、阅读、阐明假设、分析和解释数据、思考下一个实验)选修课程中对科学的认知,假设在一个学期内学生的认知会显著变得更像专家。一年级和高年级的学生群体都出现了显著的、类似专家的转变。学生们在CREATE课程中批判性思维也有显著提升。我们关于课程结束后学生对科学有更成熟、更像专家的认知的研究结果,与之前的研究结果形成了对比,在之前的研究中,学生的思维在一个学期的入门教学后显著变得不那么像专家,并且在高年级生物选修课程中变化不大。用CREATE课程来扩充传统生物学课程可能是一种经济有效的方式,有助于本科生形成更成熟的科学观。