| Literature DB >> 25713093 |
John D Coley1, Kimberly Tanner2.
Abstract
Research and theory development in cognitive psychology and science education research remain largely isolated. Biology education researchers have documented persistent scientifically inaccurate ideas, often termed misconceptions, among biology students across biological domains. In parallel, cognitive and developmental psychologists have described intuitive conceptual systems--teleological, essentialist, and anthropocentric thinking--that humans use to reason about biology. We hypothesize that seemingly unrelated biological misconceptions may have common origins in these intuitive ways of knowing, termed cognitive construals. We presented 137 undergraduate biology majors and nonmajors with six biological misconceptions. They indicated their agreement with each statement, and explained their rationale for their response. Results indicate frequent agreement with misconceptions, and frequent use of construal-based reasoning among both biology majors and nonmajors in their written explanations. Moreover, results also show associations between specific construals and the misconceptions hypothesized to arise from those construals. Strikingly, such associations were stronger among biology majors than nonmajors. These results demonstrate important linkages between intuitive ways of thinking and misconceptions in discipline-based reasoning, and raise questions about the origins, persistence, and generality of relations between intuitive reasoning and biological misconceptions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2015 PMID: 25713093 PMCID: PMC4353083 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.14-06-0094
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Misconception challenge statements used in the present study, along with hypothesized related cognitive construal
| Hypothesized related cognitive construal | Biological misconception statement | References |
|---|---|---|
| Teleological thinking | Plants produce oxygen so that animals can breathe. | |
| Species adapt to their environment in order to survive. | ||
| Many species develop protective “camouflage” to avoid predators. Genes turn on so that a cell can develop properly. | ||
| Essentialist thinking | Homeostasis keeps the body static and unchanging. | |
| Apart from differences due to age and sex, members of the same species are essentially identical; any variability is biologically unimportant. | ||
| Different cells in an organism (e.g., skin, muscle, nerve) contain different DNA. | ||
| Without outside influences, ecological communities will remain stable indefinitely. | ||
| Anthropocentric thinking | Humans have caused the majority of extinctions. | |
| Plants get their food from the soil. | ||
| The heart decides how much blood is needed throughout the body and adjusts the rate at which it beats accordingly. | ||
| Competition between organisms involves direct, aggressive interaction. |
Coding criteria for identifying cognitive construals in written explanations with examples from student responses
| Cognitive construal | Coding criteria/definition | Examples of student language |
|---|---|---|
| Teleological thinking | Response includes one or more explanations of biological structures, processes, or phenomena by reference to their supposed purpose, goal, function, or outcome. | “Adaptations are made in order to promote reproduction and the continuation of that particular species.” (biology major) “Plants produce oxygen for all kinds of life forms to help fuel the reactions necessary for daily life.” (nonmajor) |
| Essentialist thinking | Response includes one or more explanations of biological structures, processes, or phenomena consistent with the idea that underlying shared properties cause external features, and that the outward characteristics exhibited by members of any biologically relevant category—be it cells, species, or types of ecosystems—should be relatively uniform, static, and predictable. | “The coding for each type of cell is different so that each cell has a unique function.” (biology major) |
| This includes indirect reference to a biological category or group that implies uniformity with respect to a property or behavior via generic language, e.g., “cats eat mice.” | “Nature has a delicate balance, so without any drastic changes, ecological communities will mostly remain stable.” (nonmajor) | |
| Anthropocentric thinking | Response explains biological structures, processes, or phenomena by comparison with or analogy to humans or by mentioning humans, their roles, or their interventions. Response includes the inappropriate assignment of human (or animate) characteristics to nonhuman (or inanimate) entities. | “The heart does not regulate itself but is instructed by the brain. The brain recognizes either an increase or decrease in the levels of oxygen + carbon dioxide in the body + adjusts the heart rate accordingly.” (biology major) “Much like the nutrients humans and animals receive, plants get their nutrients from the soil. While not everything they need is in the soil, many are.” (nonmajor) |
Figure 1.Percentage of students agreeing with zero, one, or two teleological, essentialist, or anthropocentric misconception statements.
Figure 2.Percentage of students agreeing with each teleological misconception statement. Note: biology majors and nonmajors differ via chi-square test: *, p < 0.05; **, p < 0.01.
Figure 3.Percentage of students agreeing with essentialist misconception statements. Note: biology majors and nonmajors differ via chi-square test: +, p < 0.10; *, p < 0.05.
Figure 4.Percentage of students agreeing with anthropocentric misconception statements. Note: biology majors and nonmajors differ via chi-square test: *, p < 0.05.
Figure 5.Mean agreement with each type of misconception statement for biology majors and nonmajors (error bars represent ± 1 SEM).
Figure 6.Percentage of students using at least one teleological, essentialist, or anthropocentric construal in their written explanations.
Figure 7.Mean number of teleological, essentialist, and anthropocentric construals in written explanations among biology majors and nonmajors (error bars represent ± 1 SEM).
Results of chi-square analyses for item-wise agreement-by-construal comparisons for biology majors, nonmajors, and all students combined.
| Hypothesized underlying construal | Misconception | All students | Biology majors | Nonmajors |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Teleological thinking | Camouflage | *** | * | ** |
| Species adapt | * | * | − | |
| Plants produce O2 | * | − | − | |
| Genes turn on | − | − | − | |
| Essentialist thinking | Homeostasis | * | − | + |
| Communities remain stable | *** | * | * | |
| Cells have different DNA | *** | ** | ** | |
| Members are identical | *** | * | *** | |
| Anthropocentric thinking | Humans cause extinction | ** | * | ** |
| Plants get food | − | − | + | |
| Heart decides | − | − | − | |
| Competition | − | − | − |
−p > 0.10.
+p < 0.10.
*p < 0.05.
**p < 0.01.
***p < 0.001.
Figure 8.Percentage of students who showed evidence of teleological construals in their written explanations as a function of whether they agreed or disagreed with the misconception statement.
Figure 9.Percentage of students who showed evidence of essentialist construal in their written explanations as a function of whether they agreed or disagreed with the misconception statement.
Figure 10.Percentage of students who showed evidence of anthropocentric construals in their written explanations as a function of whether they agreed or disagreed with the misconception statement.
Relations between agreement with biological misconception statements and presence of cognitive construals in written explanations
| Frequency of cognitive construals in written explanationsa | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Agreement with misconception statements | Teleological thinking | Essentialist thinking | Anthropocentric thinking | r2 |
| All students: Agreement with… | ||||
| Teleological misconceptions | 0.224** | 0.086 | 0.127 | 0.087** |
| Essentialist misconceptions | −0.027 | 0.283*** | −0.034 | 0.080* |
| Anthropocentric misconceptions | 0.057 | 0.190 | −0.007 | 0.032 |
| Biology majors: Agreement with… | ||||
| Teleological misconceptions | 0.309* | 0.123 | 0.036 | 0.141* |
| Essentialist misconceptions | 0.190 | 0.319** | −0.189 | 0.168** |
| Anthropocentric misconceptions | 0.119 | 0.195 | −0.112 | 0.063 |
| Nonmajors: Agreement with… | ||||
| Teleological misconceptions | 0.141 | 0.032 | 0.141 | 0.044 |
| Essentialist misconceptions | −0.174 | 0.176 | −0.039 | 0.060 |
| Anthropocentric misconceptions | 0.091 | 0.061 | 0.036 | 0.014 |
For ease of interpretation, any entries in the table for which p ≤ 0.05 appear in bold.
*p ≤ 0.05.
**p ≤ 0.01.
***p ≤ 0.001.
aEntries represent standardized regression coefficients (β).