Do Alternative Instructional Approaches Result In Different Learning Progressions?
Document Type
Abstract
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Identifier/URL
40290111 (Pure); 85053890860 (QABO)
Abstract
Learning progressions (LPs) are the hypothetical pathways that students may take as they learn about core ideas in a domain. LPs take a developmental approach to learning and assume that there are constraints that drive the learning paths. The question then is: how strong are the constraints of the learning process? We report on a comparison of two distinct instructional interventions informed by the same genetics progression that were implemented with introductory biology students (10th and 11th grades). The interventions targeted the ideas in the LP but differ in the: (1) sequencing of instruction, (2) focus phenomena, and (3) activities. To determine the learning paths for each instructional intervention we used causal model search and path analyses to explore relationships within and between these ideas. Our findings may indicate that the two instructional contexts result in maps that have both differences and similarities providing further evidence about the strengths of conjectures in LPs.
Repository Citation
Castro-Faix, M.,
Todd, A.,
Romine, W.,
& Duncan, R. G.
(2018). Do Alternative Instructional Approaches Result In Different Learning Progressions?. Proceedings of International Conference of the Learning Sciences, ICLS, 2 (2018-June), 808-815.
https://corescholar.libraries.wright.edu/biology/965
DOI
10.22318/cscl2018.808
Comments
Presented at the 2018 International Society of Learning Sciences Conference