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Title page for ETD etd-06252009-052129


Type of Document Dissertation
Author Webb, Horace P
Author's Email Address pwebb@ureach.com
URN etd-06252009-052129
Title FACTORS AFFECTING CONSTRUCTION OF SCIENCE DISCOURSE IN THE CONTEXT OF AN EXTRACURRICULAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY PROJECT,
Degree Ph.D.
Department Middle-Secondary Education and Instructional Technology
Advisory Committee
Advisor Name Title
Geeta Verma, Ph.D. Committee Chair
Amy Seely Flint, Ph.D. Committee Member
Deron Boyles, Ph.D. Committee Member
Lori Elliott, Ph.D. Committee Member
Stephanie Lindemann, Ph.D. Committee Member
Keywords
  • Inquiry
  • Extracurricular Project; Critical Discourse Analys
Date of Defense 2009-05-06
Availability unrestricted
Abstract
Doing and learning science are social activities that require certain language, activities, and values. Both constitute what Gee (2005) calls Discourses. The language of learning science varies with the learning context (Lemke, 2001,1990). Science for All Americans (AAAS, 1990) and Inquiry and the National Science Education Standards (NRC, 2000) endorse inquiry science learning. In the United States, most science learning is teacher-centered; inquiry science learning is rare (NRC, 2000). This study focused on 12 high school students from two suburban high schools, their three faculty mentors, and two engineering mentors during an extracurricular robotics activity with FIRST Robotics Competition (FRC). FRC employed student-centered inquiry focus to teach science principles integrating technology.

Research questions were (a) How do science teachers and their students enact Discourses as they teach and learn science? and (b) How does the pedagogical approach of a learning activity facilitate the Discourses that are enacted by students and teachers as they learn and teach science? Using Critical Discourse Analysis (CDA), the study examined participants’ language during robotic activities to determine how language used in learning science shaped the learning and vice versa. Data sources included video-recordings of participant language and semi-structured interviews with study participants. Transcribed recordings were coded initially using Gee’s (2005) linguistic Building Tasks as a priori codes. CDA was applied to code transcripts, to construct Discourses enacted by the participants, and to determine how context facilitated their enactment.

Findings indicated that, for the students, FRC facilitated elements of Science Discourse. Wild About Robotics (W.A.R.) team became, through FRC, part of a community similar to scientists’ community that promoted knowledge and sound practices, disseminated information, supported research and development and encouraged interaction of its members. The public school science classroom in the U.S. is inimical to inquiry learning because of practices and policies associated with the epistemological stance that spawned the standards and/or testing movement and No Child Left Behind (Baez & Boyles, 2009). The findings of this study provided concrete ideas to accommodate the recommendations by NRC (1996) and NSES (2000) for creating contexts that might lead to inquiry science learning for meaningful student engagement.

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