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Switching Between Everyday and Scientific Language
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Metadata
Title
Switching Between Everyday and Scientific Language
Abstract
The research reported here investigated the everyday and scientific repertoires of children involved in semi-structured, Piagetian interviews carried out to check their understanding of dynamic astronomical concepts like daytime and night-time. It focused on the switching taking place between embedded and disembedded thinking; on the imagery which subjects referred to in their verbal dialogue and their descriptions of drawings and play-dough models of the Earth, Sun and Moon; and it examined the prevalence and character of animism and figurative speech in children’s thinking. Five hundred and thirty-nine children (aged 3–18) from Wairarapa in New Zealand (171 boys and 185 girls) and Changchun in China (99 boys and 84 girls) took part in the study. Modified ordinal scales for the relevant concept categories were used to classify children’s responses and data from each age group (with numbers balanced as closely as practicable by culture and gender) analysed with Kolmogorov-Smirnov two-sample tests (at an alpha level of 0.05). Although, in general, there was consistency of dynamic concepts within and across media and their associated modalities in keeping with the theory of conceptual coherence (see Blown and Bryce 2010; Bryce and Blown 2016), there were several cases of inter-modal and intra-modal switching in both cultures. Qualitative data from the interview protocols revealed how children switch between everyday and scientific language (in both directions) and use imagery in response to questioning. The research indicates that children’s grasp of scientific ideas in this field may ordinarily be under-estimated if one only goes by formal scientific expression and vocabulary.
Date
01/01/2017
Citation
Blown, E. J., & Bryce, T. G. K. (2017). Switching Between Everyday and Scientific Language. Research in Science Education, 47(3), 621–653. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11165-016-9520-3
Type of Publication
Author(s)
Blown, Eric J. | Bryce, Tom G. K.
Content
Celestial Motion > Day and Night | Celestial Motion > Sun-Earth-Moon
Construct
Methodology
Research Setting
Institution(s)
University of Strathclyde, School of Education | University of Strathclyde, School of Education
Journal Name
Research in Science Education
Peer-Reviewed Status
Publisher
Springer Netherlands
Volume
47
Issue Number
3
ISSN
1573-1898
Resource Type
Nation(s) of Study
United Kingdom | New Zealand | China
Language
English