| Literature DB >> 35411127 |
Manman Wang1, Shoubao Gao1, Weiling Gui1, Jianqiang Ye2, Shuaishuai Mi1.
Abstract
This study used the Latent Dirichlet Allocation (LDA) topic model to analyze pre-service teachers' views on the nature of science (NOS). This approach can be used to automate the classification of documents, and at the same time, the researcher does not need to deduce with a NOS framework prior to evaluation. Participants were 155 pre-service teachers studying at the Shandong Normal University in China. To gather our data, we used an open questionnaire, namely, the Views of Nature of Science Questionnaire-Form C (VNOS-C). LDA topic modeling was used to classify the document, which was divided into 12 topics. By comparing the LDA topic modeling results with the theoretical framework behind the VNOS-C questionnaire, we categorized these 12 topics into eight descriptive aspects of the NOS: The Empirical Nature of Scientific Knowledge, Observation, Inference, and Theoretical Entities in Science, Scientific Theories and Laws, The Theory-Laden Nature of Scientific Knowledge, The Social and Cultural Embeddedness of Scientific Knowledge, The Myth of The Scientific Method, The Tentative Nature of Scientific Knowledge, and The Nature of Scientific Theory. The results show that pre-service teachers usually hold naive or mixed views of the NOS. In addition, each aspect of NOS is not independent of each other but interrelated and influencing each other. In the future, more consideration can be given to the relationship between each aspect of NOS.Entities:
Keywords: Latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) topic modeling; Nature of science; Pre-service teachers
Year: 2022 PMID: 35411127 PMCID: PMC8986027 DOI: 10.1007/s11191-022-00332-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Sci Educ (Dordr) ISSN: 0926-7220 Impact factor: 2.114
Fig. 1Latent Dirichlet allocation (LDA) for topic modeling (Momtazi, 2018)
Fig. 2An overview of LDA
Twenty most probable words of each topic (proportion value retains three effective numbers)
| Topic 1 | Topic 2 | Topic 3 | Topic 4 | Topic 5 | Topic 6 | Topic 7 | Topic 8 | Topic 9 | Topic 10 | Topic 11 | Topic 12 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Theory 0. 194 | Experiment 0.0961 | Science 0.176 | Theory 0.0970 | Experiment 0.121 | Humanity 0.0808 | Science 0.142 | Data 0.0542 | science 0. 186 | Science 0.172 | Theory 0.0699 | Science 0.159 |
| Phenomenon 0. 117 | Explore 0.0940 | the study 0.0401 | Law 0.0721 | Science 0.0898 | Experiment 0.0764 | nucleus 0.0380 | Analysis 0.0428 | Experiment 0.136 | Law 0.0940 | Study 0.0551 | Development 0.121 |
| Hypothesis 0. 0575 | Science 0.0732 | Dinosaur 0.0341 | Newton 0.0512 | Model 0.0824 | Theory 0.0496 | Atom 0.0327 | Conclusion 0.0390 | knowledge 0.108 | Objective 0.0638 | Method 0.0262 | Society 0.0794 |
| Experiment 0. 0490 | Data 0.0481 | Extinct 0.0297 | Physical 0.0500 | Atom 0.0725 | Verification 0.0396 | Particle 0.0300 | Object 0.0390 | Find 0.0511 | Thing 0.0372 | Standard 0.0245 | Culture 0.0540 |
| Explanation 0. 0484 | Subject 0.0425 | Earth 0.0265 | put forward 0.0405 | put forward 0.0627 | Find 0.0389 | Verification 0.0281 | Design 0.0369 | Error 0.0204 | Development 0.0304 | Logic 0.0207 | species 0.0364 |
| Species 0. 0310 | Conclusion 0.0364 | resulting in 0.0265 | Mechanics 0.0282 | Structure 0.0308 | World 0.0371 | prove 0.0264 | Learn 0.0356 | create 0. 0202 | Study 0. 0250 | Science 0.0197 | value 0.0281 |
| Creation 0. 0250 | Truth 0.0310 | Species 0.0236 | Quantum 0.0230 | Species 0.0308 | Prove 0.0201 | Country 0.0251 | law 0.0339 | Certain 0.0200 | Religion 0.0239 | System 0.0186 | Experiment 0.0246 |
| Observation 0. 0234 | Rule 0.0214 | Volcanic 0. 0234 | Classic 0.0207 | Electron 0.0231 | Idea 0.0194 | Experiment 0.0239 | Collect 0.0331 | Imagination 0.0196 | influences 0. 0213 | Experience 0.0173 | Basis 0.0191 |
| Data 0. 0221 | Creature 0.0214 | Meteorite 0.0216 | System 0.0198 | Theory 0.0216 | View 0.0194 | create 0.0209 | change 0.0259 | Feature 0.0165 | Imagination 0.0204 | Form 0. 0150 | Theory 0.0186 |
| Imagination 0. 0207 | Condition 0.0210 | Culture 0.0212 | Field 0.0196 | Truth 0.0203 | Guess 0.0187 | Process 0.0199 | Livelihood 0.0219 | Study 0.0158 | Fact 0.0200 | Philosophy 0.0148 | Test 0.0181 |
| Conformity 0. 0186 | Structure 0.0196 | break out 0.0210 | Movement 0.0193 | Subject 0.0177 | Think 0.0170 | Philosophy 0.0194 | Verification 0.0205 | Instrument 0.0145 | Movement 0. 0161 | Object 0. 0133 | Characteristic 0.0160 |
| Feature 0.01337 | Process 0.0160 | Subject 0.0205 | Find 0.0184 | Stage 0.0156 | Universe 0.0138 | observed 0.0165 | Fall 0.0205 | Method 0.0140 | Explanation 0.0159 | phenomenon 0.0131 | Era 0.0151 |
| Definition 0.0101 | Nature 0.0160 | Knowledge 0.0205 | quantum mechanics 0.0170 | set up 0.0148 | Society 0.0128 | Conclusion 0.0163 | Knowledge 0.0200 | Explore 0.0137 | Particle 0.0142 | view 0.0121 | process 0.0150 |
| Change 0.00970 | Law 0.0142 | Substance 0.0199 | Experiment 0.0149 | Scattering 0.0143 | Angle 0.0126 | Electron 0.0162 | Biological 0.0196 | Use 0.0131 | Thinking 0.0140 | Test 0.0121 | Practice 0.0131 |
| Perfect 0.00873 | Evidence 0.0140 | Atom 0.0183 | History 0.0117 | Development 0.0132 | Development0.00981 | Livelihood 0.0158 | Experiment 0.0188 | Factor 0.0121 | Law 0.0134 | concept 0.0116 | Technology 0.0130 |
| Verification 0.00795 | Purpose 0.0123 | the reason 0.0170 | Energy 0.0107 | Overthrow 0.0111 | Life 0.00981 | Practice 0.0152 | Thing 0.0183 | law 0.00977 | Cognition 0.0120 | Principle 0.0116 | create 0. 0125 |
| Support 0.00757 | Animals 0.0117 | Hit 0.0165 | Einstein 0.0107 | Create 0.0111 | Method 0.00957 | Political 0.0144 | Manner 0.0168 | Rule 0.00941 | Subjective 0.00932 | difference 0.0114 | Fusion 0.0123 |
| Reality 0.00718 | Inference 0.0113 | Occur 0.0152 | Happening 0.0105 | Formula 0.0110 | Produce 0.00957 | Bombardment 0.0139 | means 0.0154 | Include 0.00906 | set up 0.00816 | Mathematics 0.0108 | Technology 0.0120 |
| Evolution 0.00718 | Facts 0.0108 | Create 0.0121 | Religion 0.00909 | Provide 0.00978 | Thinking 0.00934 | Time 0.0135 | process 0.0137 | design 0.00887 | Gene 0.00758 | language 0.0106 | Livelihood 0.0118 |
| Verification 0.00679 | Guess 0.009172 | Planning 0.0118 | the study 0.00886 | Law 0.00884 | Learn 0.00911 | Judgment 0.0133 | Variety 0.0135 | Already 0.00853 | Nature 0.00719 | Classification 0.0102 | Occur 0.0106 |
Document fragments highly relevant to each topic
| Topic | Document fragments highly relevant to each topic |
|---|---|
| Topic 1 | ...Experiments are used to test theories or verify certain phenomena...an experiment enables researchers to develop something that they think can be established based on the theory... ...scientific theories will change...with the development and progress of society and the advancement of experimental equipment, we have secured better conditions to study, verify, improve, and apply the scientific and theoretical knowledge we have gained, maintain a questioning attitude, and discover problems.. ...a scientist's determination of the characteristics of a species is limited to his theory...these characteristics will change, and their accuracy is difficult to verify.. |
| Topic 2 | ...an experiment is an inquiry conducted to verify the correctness of a truth...the process of verifying other truths through known truths is also an experiment.. ...science is about organizing knowledge and obtaining regular and truthful experiences...scientific subjects comprise scientific truths, they are truths obtained by scientists after continuous trials and experiments...knowledge of scientific disciplines can be used to solve problems.. |
| Topic 3 | ...different scientists get different reasons for the extinction of dinosaurs based on the same data, because different scientists think differently...scientists could not use existing data to experiment on how the dinosaurs went extinct.. |
| Topic 4 | ...when scientists develop a theory, that scientific theory is different from the original scientific theory. The key is that the applicable conditions of the theory are no longer the same. For example, when Newton's law of motion was proposed.. ... Scientific theories are different from scientific laws. Scientific theory is a set of research methods and science for a specific field, and should contain scientific laws.. |
| Topic 5 | ... In the beginning, Thomson proposed... Rutherford used...and found that... Prove the nuclear structure.. |
| Topic 6 | ... Science uses real and natural methods to help people understand the world. It does not involve too many human emotions.. ... The development of scientific knowledge certainly requires experiments...although some experiments were created in a certain way.. |
| Topic 7 | ...scientists infer the position of the nucleus from the motion of the atom... Later, various microscopes with high magnification were used.. |
| Topic 8 | ... I believe experimentation refers to a series of actions in which learners or researchers design and perform specific operations when exploring an unknown problem or verifying a known problem. For example, in physics, to verify Newton's second law, we.. |
| Topic 9 | ... Experiments are based on existing knowledge, using instruments and methods of..... to conduct a scientific exploration process of a certain understanding or knowledge... ... Imagination and creativity are used to plan and design the collection of data.... |
| Topic 10 | ... Science is the exploration of the objective laws of the world, and its goal should be the general laws that cannot be changed by people and their observation and thinking.. |
| Topic 11 | ... Science is a theory that accurately reflects the nature and laws of the world.. ... Scientific theories have rigorous logic and systematic characteristics, and scientific theories are the tools based on the processing of the consensus of known sensory information. |
| Topic 12 | ... I believe that science is the product of advanced technology in an era based on social development, which can reflect the level of scientific and technological development... ... I believe that science is integrated with social and cultural values. First...than.. |
Comparison of the LDA topic modeling results and the NOS framework behind the VNOS-C questionnaire
| NOS framework | Previous researchers used VNOS to obtain the NOS view | LDA topic modeling results | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| More naive views | More informed views | More naive views | More informed views | Mixed views | |
| The Empirical Nature of Scientific Knowledge | • Science is concerned with facts. We use observed facts to prove that theories are true (Bell et al., • Science is concerned only with experiments and mathematical numbers in the laboratory (Mesci, | • Much of the development of scientific knowledge depends on observation….[But] I think what we observe is a function of convention. I don’t believe that the goal of science is (or should be) the accumulation of observable facts (Lederman et al., • Rather…science involves abstraction, one step of abstraction after another (Lederman et al., • Science is not limited to studying only visible events. Although scientists do not directly see many cases with their eyes, they make observations and explanations based on empirical data as a result of these observations. For example, scientists recently found a new planet for a long years later based on observations (Bell et al., | Topic 2 Topic 10 | Topic 6 Topic 9 | |
| Observation, Inference, and Theoretical Entities in Science | • Scientists are quite certain about the structure of the atom. First scientists only had theories of how the atom was constructed until they were able to use very powerful microscopes to see how they were constructed (Lederman et al., • Scientists are strongly sure of the structure of an atom due to chemical structures observed among the elements. The electron microscope presented strong evidence (visually) of the structure (Lederman et al., | • Science is based on observations by sensory organs and technological instruments, and inferences are made by associating these observations with existing knowledge. (Mesci, | Topic 5 | Topic 7 | |
| Scientific Theories and Laws | • Newton’s Law #1 is proven and through various testing and experiments it has come to be known as a proven law. Theories, however, have not been proved enough to be changed into laws (Bell et al., • A scientific law is somewhat set in stone, proven to be true…A scientific theory is apt to change and be proven false at any time. (Mesci, • Scientific theories are not accepted by everyone, while scientific laws are proven and accepted by everyone (Lederman et al., | • A scientific law describes quantitative relationships between phenomena such as universal attraction between objects. Scientific theories are made of concepts that are in accordance with common observation or go beyond and propose new explanatory models for the world (Lederman et al., | Topic 4 | ||
| The Theory-Laden Nature of Scientific Knowledge | • [Scientists reach different conclusions] because the scientists were not around when the dinosaurs became extinct, so no one witnessed what happened….I think the only way to give a satisfactory answer to the extinction of the dinosaurs is to go back in time to witness what happened (Lederman et al., | • Both conclusions are possible because there may be different interpretations of the same data. Different scientists may come up with different explanations based on their own education and background or what they feel are inconsistencies in others ideas (Lederman et al., | Topic 3 | ||
| The Social and Cultural Embeddedness of Scientific Knowledge | • Science is about the facts and could not be influenced by cultures and society (Lederman et al., | • Of course culture influence the ideas in science. It was more than a 100 years after Copernicus that his ideas were considered because religious beliefs of the church sort of favored the geocentric model (Lederman et al., | Topic 12 | ||
| The Myth of The Scientific Method | • Science has a particular method of going about things, the scientific method (Lederman et al., | • When you are in sixth grade you learn that here is the scientific method and the first thing you do this, and the second thing you do that and so on…That’s how we may say we do science, but [it is different from]…the way that we actually do science (Lederman et al., | Topic 6 Topic 8 Topic 9 | ||
| The Tentative Nature of Scientific Knowledge | • Scientific knowledge is certain, and does not change in any way, because it is the same everywhere (Mesci, | • Everything in science is subject to change with new evidence and interpretation of that evidence. We are never 100% sure about anything because…negative evidence will call a theory or law into question, and possibly cause a modification (Lederman et al., | Topic 1 | ||
| The Creative and Imaginative Nature of Scientific Knowledge | • Scientific studies develop in the direction of logic and proof, so there is no room for imagination and creativity in science. Science is expressed in definite mathematical numbers. (Mesci, | • Logic plays a large role in the scientific process, but imagination and creativity are essential for the formulation of novel ideas …to explain why the results were observed (Lederman et al., • Scientists use imagination and creativity in their work. Creativity and imagination play an important role at every moment of a study. Research questions, the procedures, results, and conclusions are shaped by creativity and imagination. (Mesci, | |||
| The Nature of Scientific Theory | • A theory is an untested idea, or an idea that is undergoing additional tests, generally it hasn’t been proved to the satisfaction of the scientific community (Lederman et al., | • In the vocabulary of a scientist the word theory is used differently than in the general population. It does not mean someone’s idea that can’t be proven. It is a concept that has considerable evidence behind it and has endured the attempts to disprove it (Lederman et al., | Topic 1 Topic 11 | ||