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Prediction-making in novel situations and the role of self-generated analogies

conference contribution
posted on 2024-02-07, 19:34 authored by Ian Abrahams, Nikolaos FotouNikolaos Fotou
<p>In this paper, we report on a cross-age in which students were asked to make predictions in situations theyhad not considered before (novel situations) and explain the reasons that led them to their predictions. The aim was toinvestigate students’ predictions in these novel situations in terms of compatibility with the scientific account and therole that self-generated analogies play in their reasoning. A mixed method approach was used with data being collectedthrough the use of written questionnaires and audio-recorded group interviews. The study sample was composed of37, 31, 29, 35 and 34 students aged 8-9, 10-11, 11-12, 12-13 and 16-17 years respectively recruited from ten differentschools in the same geographical region of Greece. A series of semi-structured group interviews/discussions werecarried out in combination with the administration of a paper-and-pencil survey. Data were collected through thestudents’ written responses in the questionnaire and those they gave during the group discussions which were taperecordedand transcribed. These were analyzed to ascertain how they made their predictions, whether they drew on theuse of analogies, and if so, the nature of the analogies that they used. The analysis revealed similarities not only interms of the predictions students across the five age groups made, but also as per the reasoning process followed andthe analogies they drew on in order to familiarize themselves with the novel situations and thus make their predictions.The use of such analogies was unrelated to their age and, in many cases, students’ analogical reasoning led them tomake predictions that were not compatible with the scientific view while. The findings of the study suggest thatteachers need to be more aware of the nature of analogies students use in their reasoning and the incorrect ideas(misconceptions) such reasoning gives rise to. Also, more attention needs to be payed from the part of the teacher onhow, and why, reasoning on the basis of such analogies can, in many cases, lead students to an understandingincompatible with the scientific account</p>

History

School affiliated with

  • University of Lincoln (Historic Research Outputs)

Publisher

Hellenic Physical Society

Date Submitted

2018-10-20

Date Accepted

2018-01-01

Date of First Publication

2018-10-20

Date of Final Publication

2018-10-20

Event Name

Hellenic Physical Society 27th Conference Thessaloniki

ePrints ID

33231