January 1st, 2007 | RESEARCH
The goal of this study is to explore new tools for analyzing scientific sense-making in out-of-school settings. Although such measures are now common in science classroom research, dialogically based methodological approaches are relatively new to informal learning research. Such out-of-classroom settings have more recently become a breeding ground for new design approaches for tracking scientific talk and ideas within complex data-sets. The research reported here seeks to understand the language people do use to make sense of the life sciences over time. Another goal of this study is to track biological themes over time, using a new analytical scheme - the Tool for Observing Biological Talk Over Time. Our analyses are linked to and informed by tensions between particularistic and holistic data collection and analysis, qualitative and quantitative representations, and everyday and formal science discourse. These tensions and our analyses are linked to larger theoretical frameworks and to the recursive interplay between theory and practice.
Document
(no document provided)
Team Members
Doris Ash, Author, University of California, Santa CruzRhiannon Crain, Author, University of California, Santa Cruz
Carol Brandt, Author, University of California, Santa Cruz
Molly Loomis, Author, University of California, Santa Cruz
Mele Wheaton, Author, University of California, Santa Cruz
Christine Bennett, Author, University of California, Santa Cruz
Citation
Publication: International Journal of Science Education
Volume: 29
Number: 12
Page(s): 1581
Related URLs
Tags
Audience: Museum | ISE Professionals
Discipline: Education and learning science | General STEM | Life science
Resource Type: Peer-reviewed article | Research Products
Environment Type: Aquarium and Zoo Exhibits | Aquarium and Zoo Programs | Exhibitions | Public Programs