Treibergs Kira A, Esparza David, Yamazaki Jeannie A, Goebel Marc, Smith Michelle K
Department of Natural Resources and the Environment Cornell University Ithaca New York USA.
Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology Cornell University Ithaca New York USA.
Ecol Evol. 2022 Nov 15;12(11):e9454. doi: 10.1002/ece3.9454. eCollection 2022 Nov.
An understanding of both cognitive and affective domains of learning is critical to promoting undergraduate student success in biology. Field courses-which support student learning, observation, and experimentation in the outdoors-have been shown to be effective in supporting cognitive student outcomes. However, less is known about students' affective responses during field instruction. To better understand the affective domain in this course type, we asked students enrolled in a campus-based introductory field biology course to engage in weekly reflective journaling over the course of a semester. We employed inductive and deductive coding of over 700 field journal reflections using the Model of the Affective Domain for the Geosciences as a conceptual basis. Informed by our results, we present a theoretically-driven, five-part Framework of Student Affect in Field Biology and in-depth and novel insights into what students feel, believe, and value as they participate in an undergraduate field course. Our framework and coding results can be used by field course instructors to understand how to better design experiences that leave students feeling confident in their abilities, interested to learn more about nature, and empowered to persist in the discipline.
理解学习的认知和情感领域对于促进本科生在生物学领域取得成功至关重要。野外课程——支持学生在户外进行学习、观察和实验——已被证明在支持学生的认知成果方面是有效的。然而,对于野外教学过程中学生的情感反应,我们了解得较少。为了更好地理解这类课程中的情感领域,我们要求参加校园基础入门野外生物学课程的学生在一个学期内每周进行反思性日志记录。我们以地球科学情感领域模型为概念基础,对700多篇野外日志反思进行了归纳和演绎编码。根据我们的结果,我们提出了一个理论驱动的、由五个部分组成的野外生物学学生情感框架,并对学生在参加本科野外课程时的感受、信念和价值观进行了深入且新颖的洞察。野外课程教师可以使用我们的框架和编码结果,来了解如何更好地设计体验活动,让学生对自己的能力充满信心,对了解更多自然知识产生兴趣,并在该学科领域有坚持下去的动力。