| Literature DB >> 27909029 |
Susan Rowland1, Rhianna Pedwell2, Gwen Lawrie2, Joseph Lovie-Toon2, Yu Hung2.
Abstract
The recent push for more authentic teaching and learning in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics indicates a shared agreement that undergraduates require greater exposure to professional practices. There is considerable variation, however, in how "authentic" science education is defined. In this paper we present our definition of authenticity as it applies to an "authentic" large-scale undergraduate research experience (ALURE); we also look to the literature and the student voice for alternate perceptions around this concept. A metareview of science education literature confirmed the inconsistency in definitions and application of the notion of authentic science education. An exploration of how authenticity was explained in 604 reflections from ALURE and traditional laboratory students revealed contrasting and surprising notions and experiences of authenticity. We consider the student experience in terms of alignment with 1) the intent of our designed curriculum and 2) the literature definitions of authentic science education. These findings contribute to the conversation surrounding authenticity in science education. They suggest two things: 1) educational experiences can have significant authenticity for the participants, even when there is no purposeful design for authentic practice, and 2) the continuing discussion of and design for authenticity in UREs may be redundant.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27909029 PMCID: PMC5132376 DOI: 10.1187/cbe.16-02-0102
Source DB: PubMed Journal: CBE Life Sci Educ ISSN: 1931-7913 Impact factor: 3.325
Literature definitions of “authentic”
| Category 1: Science education at the K–12 level |
|---|
| We designed learning environments that, in our view, shared some crucial features with everyday environments of scientists, engineers… . Because of these shared features, we used the adjective |
| Here, we define |
| Accordingly, |
| Practical science in out-of-school contexts is more “ |
Note: Bold for emphasis is ours, except in Wood and McComas (2014).
Synthesis of the literature definitions of “authentic” learning in science
| Aspect or definition of authenticity | Times occurring |
|---|---|
| Experience of what scientists “do” (practices), how science is done, and what science “is” | 15 |
| Ownership/personal relevance to student | 7 |
| Experimental design; question/hypothesis, including by students | 6 |
| Results are novel/publishable/contribute to existing research | 4 |
| Communication | 4 |
| Critical thinking | 3 |
| Data analysis | 2 |
| Peer teamwork | 2 |
| Audience (real problem) | 2 |
| One project for the course duration | 1 |
| “Emerges” from constituent parts of experience | 1 |
| Extended participation (in research) | 1 |
| “Open investigations” | 1 |
| “Ill-structured and complex goals” | 1 |
| Appropriate for the learner education level | 1 |
Coding framework adapted from Hunter
The parent and sub/child categories appear as in the original source, with the hierarchy determined by the two coders (J.L.-T and Y.H). Parent and subcategory nodes are colored. Uncolored child categories/nodes contain the subcoding for positive/negative/neutral statements. Within each child node, the coders organized statements from ALURE and LEAPS students as positive, negative, or neutral.
FIGURE 1.ALURE word tree: “real.” The figure shows 41 references or instances of the word “real” in all positively coded ALURE reflections (n = 94). The context words on either side of the search word (in red) were lengthened to 10 words on either side of the word. The references are displayed in alphabetical order on each side, and therefore cannot be read from left to right to form a sentence or phrase. (Also see Supplemental Figure S1.)
FIGURE 2.LEAPS word tree: “real.” The figure shows 71 references or instances of the word “real” in all positively coded LEAPS reflections (n = 510). The context words on either side of the search word (in red) were lengthened to 10 words on either side of the search word. The references are displayed in alphabetical order on each side, and therefore cannot be read from left to right to form a sentence or phrase. (Also see Supplemental Figure S2.)
ALURE and LEAPS student perceptions of authenticity
| ALURE (94 sources, 53 uses of stem words) | ||
|---|---|---|
| Stem word (instances) | Concept of authenticity categories | Counta |
| Real (41) | Gaining some sense of what research is like | 15 |
| Not like other practical classes/LEAPS | 6 | |
| Insight into being in a real/professional laboratory setting or career | 6 | |
| Participation in a “real” project | 5 | |
| Contributing to research | 4 | |
| Applied theory to “real” context | 3 | |
| ALURE design mimics “real-life” | 2 | |
| Actual(ly) (9) | “Contribution to science” and “meaningful results” | 3 |
| Understanding of what working as a researcher/in a laboratory is like | 2 | |
| Doing research/working on “actual” project | 2 | |
| Actual research means unknown results | 1 | |
| “Doing something” | 1 | |
| Authentic (3) | Being in a laboratory; doing research | 2 |
| The environment (was) | 1 | |
aThe number of total references is calculated by Nvivo; some individual students use the query word multiple times in their reflection, so the count does not always reflect the number of students who used the word. The trees for “actual” and “actually” have been combined in both streams, due to their small size and shared stem. The table summarizes the results from Figures 1 and 2 and the other word trees that are not shown.
Frequency of definitions of authenticity and comparison with LEAPS and ALURE definitions and student perceptions
| Concept as defined in model and by students | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ALURE | LEAPS | |||
| Definition of authenticity: Literature | Modela | Studentb | Model | Student |
| Experience of what scientists “do” (practices)/ how science is done | ✓c | 64 | ✓ | 121 |
| Ownership/personal relevance to student | ∼ | 26 | ∼ | 13 |
| Experimental design; question/hypothesis, including by students | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Results are novel/publishable/contribute to existing research | ✓ | – | ||
| Communication | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Critical thinking | ✓ | ∼ | ||
| Data analysis | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Outcome is unknown to all | ✓ | – | ||
| Peer teamwork | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| Audience (real problem) | ✓ | – | ||
| One project for the course duration | ✓ | ✓ | ||
| “Emerges” from constituent parts of experience | ∼ | ∼ | ||
| Extended participation (in research) | – | – | ||
| “Open investigations” | – | – | ||
| Appropriate for the learner education level | ✓ | ✓ | ||
a“Model” refers to the presence of the theme in our design of the learning model.
b “Student” refers to the description of the enacted model by students. The numbers in the “student” comments indicate the number of coded references that align to the literature theme according to the Nvivo analysis.
cA checkmark (✓) indicates that this aspect is built into the ALURE or LEAPS examined in this study, while a dash (–) indicates this aspect is not incorporated. A tilde (∼) indicates that this aspect of authenticity can vary, depending on the individual student.