| Literature DB >> 35621517 |
Ji-Yoon Kim1, Min-Kyeong Shim2, Young-Mee Hwang1,3.
Abstract
As the COVID-19 pandemic continues, university education and feedback guidance have inevitably moved to online platforms, becoming a global trend. This study focuses on a case of Sookmyung Women's University in South Korea, which has operated an online discussion clinic for university general education for more than a year as a case study. There are two main research methods. A frequency analysis was conducted to confirm what kind of counseling the students preferred at the discussion clinic based on the answers written in the students' applications. The students whose applications were used for the analysis were divided into 57 teams, and there were two to six members per team. The results were as follows: In the survey results, students wanted help with the preparation process necessary for the discussion and the practical strategies for facilitating discussions. They wanted personalized counseling, demonstrating that discussion education provided in the foundational curriculum is insufficient. Second, the educational model of the discussion clinic and educational examples were examined. The findings confirmed that online discussion education is effective if the system is technically supplemented. Instructors and researchers are prepared to meet students' demands for feedback and individual counseling, even if these are not provided through face-to-face discussions. Additionally, face-to-face guidance can be operated more effectively by taking advantage of online systems. The findings also demonstrate that further research on designing and operating online discussion centers is required. This study is a preceding study on developing online systems and educational guidelines for higher educational institutions to present new insights into smart learning. This paper also includes suggestions for educational and scientific discussions. The online discussion instructional model shown in this paper explores methods of scientific communication through a debate on scientific issues.Entities:
Keywords: COVID-19 pandemic; discussion programs; educational guidelines; online discussion clinic; online discussion feedback systems; smart learning; university education
Year: 2022 PMID: 35621517 PMCID: PMC9141520 DOI: 10.3390/ejihpe12050037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur J Investig Health Psychol Educ ISSN: 2174-8144
The clinic area and contents of the counseling and guidance.
| Clinic Area | Contents of Counseling and Guidance | Clinic Area | Contents of Counseling and Guidance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Preparation of Discussion |
Research materials Analyze discussion points Complete the discussion briefs Complete the introduction | Facilitation of Discussion |
Make strategies for both for/against Learn methods for confirming questions Strategies for counterargument |
Figure 1Sookmyung Women’s University Online Discussion Clinic.
Online Discussion Clinic sections preferred by the students.
| Reaction | Case Percentage | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| N | Percentage | |||
| Preferred Debate Clinic | Introduction | 34 | 28.6% | 59.6% |
| Point analysis | 22 | 18.5% | 38.6% | |
| Discussion outline | 21 | 17.6% | 36.8% | |
| Argument cards | 10 | 8.4% | 17.5% | |
| Data research and organization | 7 | 5.9% | 12.3% | |
| Discussion facilitation | 24 | 20.2% | 42.1% | |
| Others | 1 | 0.8% | 1.8% | |
| Total | 119 | 100.0% | 208.8% | |
Introduction clinic before and after.
| Students’ Introductory Statement before the Clinic | Students’ Introductory Statement after the Clinic | Focus of the Clinic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Animal testing should be prohibited (Agree) | It can prevent infringement of animal rights. |
It can protect the rights of animals. Prohibiting animal testing can prevent numerous side effects caused by animal testing. Even if animal testing is prohibited, there are plenty of ways to replace animal testing. |
Rather than first revealing and emphasizing the problem, change your perspective toward claiming the expected effect. If the expected effect is first mentioned in the first sentence (assertion), and a problem is presented as a basis, it can be a more convincing argument. Differentiate arguments in terms of various categories. Balanced arguments can be presented, and through this, questions and answers can be approached in various ways to improve logic. |
| Prohibiting animal testing can prevent numerous side effects caused by animal testing. | |||
| Even if animal testing is prohibited, alternatives to animal testing can be used thanks to the development of current technology. | |||
| Animal testing should be prohibited (Disagree) | Animal testing can save other lives, including human lives. |
If animal testing is prohibited, it could disrupt the driving force behind the development of new drugs and vaccines. If animal testing is prohibited, it becomes unclear how to prove the stability of new drugs. |
Prepare the argument centered on harm. If you write an argument in the first sentence of the body paragraph and present a problem as a basis, it can be a more convincing argument. Differentiate arguments in terms of various categories. Balanced arguments can be presented, and through this, questions and answers can be approached in various ways to improve logic. |
| Humans and animals are biologically similar. | |||
| Animal testing is the most effective method. | |||
| The Paris Climate Change Convention is effective. (Agree) | The Paris Climate Change Convention promised investment in renewable technology to improve environmental problems. |
The Paris Climate Change Convention is effective in reducing greenhouse gas emissions. The Paris Climate Change Convention embodies its goals through direct and specific interventions. The Paris Climate Change Convention is an international mechanism for responding to environmental disasters. |
Rather than first revealing and emphasizing the problem, change your perspective toward claiming the expected effect. If the expected effect is mentioned first in the topic sentence (assertion), and a problem is presented as a basis, it can be a more convincing argument. Differentiate arguments in terms of various categories. Present balanced arguments, and through this, questions and answers can be approached in various ways to improve logic. |
| The Paris Climate Change Convention works. | |||
| The Paris Climate Change Convention aims at a discriminatory principle of responsibility. | |||
| The Paris Climate Change Convention is effective. (Disagree) | The Paris Climate Change Convention is an ineffective agreement. |
The effect of suppressing greenhouse gas emissions is insignificant, and there is a risk of economic loss. The power play within the agreement can be induced, and political discrepancy and tension can occur in that the internal situation varies from country to country. It confirms contradictions in environmental ethics. |
Prepare the argument by centering on harm. If you write the topic sentence of the argument paragraph and present a problem as a basis, it can be a more convincing argument. Differentiate arguments in terms of various categories. Present balanced arguments, and through this, questions and answers can be approached in various ways to improve logic. |
| The Paris Climate Change Convention might be politically harmful. | |||
| You can see the contradictions in the ethical aspects across different countries from the Paris Climate Change Convention. |
Educational cases of “Confirmation Question” using the steps of critical thinking process [17].
| Critical Thinking Stages | Explanation | Confirmation Questions | A Confirmation Question That the “Agree” Team Can Ask the “Disagree” Team | A Confirmation Question That the “Disagree” Team Can Ask the “Agree” Team |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Observation |
Determine what information you can acquire. Collect information from various sources. Check the information that already exists. Explore different perspectives/views Identify commonalities and contradictions. |
How was it possible to acquire information on the other party’s arguments or objections? Is it possible from a different perspective? Is there anything to refute or contradict? |
Using the difference in opinions between China and the US, the US announced that their carbon emissions decreased even after their withdrawal from the Paris Convention, and China claims that their emission level increased. Is that correct? |
Since the adoption of the Paris Climate Change Convention, the prediction that this agreement will work because countries across the globe will reduce greenhouse gas emissions remains conditional depending on the actions taken by each country. Do you think goals can lead to desired results in real life? |
| Analysis |
Organize information into the main topic or argument. |
Is this what the opponent means when you summarize their arguments or objections? |
Currently, due to the nature of the country, China’s industry is operating without considering various environmental aspects. Do you agree on this part? |
Is it correct to compare the Kyoto Protocol with the Paris Climate Change Agreement and assert that the Paris Convention has expanded its boundary to include Kyoto as well? |
| Evaluation |
Distinguish the value of the information. Identify priorities with important information. Distinguish between opinions and facts. |
If so, is the basis for the introductory argument so important? Which is more important? |
In other words, China is facing a problem arising from the characteristics of its own national policy, and technically, is this unrelated to joining the Paris Convention? |
Is the Paris Climate Agreement accountable for the demolition of the world’s largest coal company? Is it not because of the development of alternative energy? |
| Questioning |
Consider other possible alternatives. Create a new hypothesis. |
Ask for another alternative. Ask for a new hypothesis. |
Do you admit that it is hypocritical to simply discuss the effectiveness of the Paris Convention while failing to address the difference between China and the US? |
As an example of support for developing countries for raising national competency, it is said that the World Bank invests a lot of money in projects to reduce carbon emissions in developing countries, which is not just an investment, but a bond that holds the recipient countries accountable. Is that right? |
| Contextualization | Contextualizing information based on the following criteria: |
How do you mean this from a historical perspective? How do you mean this from an ethical perspective? How do you mean this from a cultural perspective? Continue to apply different areas of discipline for contextualization. |
The US unilaterally withdrew from the Paris Agreement and said they expected the promise to support developing countries would also be compromised. Is that right? |
Do you agree that this creates a relationship between creditors and debtors and is no different from taking on debt based on the standards of global institutions that exercise their dominance over developing countries? |
| Self-reflection |
Create questions and experiments about conclusions. Reflect on possible results. |
Does the result of the introduction lead to this reflection? |
Do you admit that it is an error of hasty generalization to be convinced that other developed countries will also cut off support just because the US broke its promise to support developing countries? |
Do you agree that World Bank investment is not a pure investment and can place great pressure on developing countries to join international politics in a pretense exchange for national autonomy? |
| Discussion Topic: “Animal testing should be prohibited” | ||||
| Critical Thinking Stages | Explanation | Confirmation Questions | A confirmation question that the “agree” team can ask the “disagree” team | A confirmation question that the “disagree” team can ask the “agree” team |
| Observation |
Determine what information you can acquire. Collect information from various sources. Check the validity of the collected information. Explore different perspectives/views. Identify commonalities and contradictions. |
How was it possible to acquire information on the opponent’s arguments or objections? Is it possible from a different perspective? Is there anything to refute or contradict? |
Do you agree that animal testing is a life-killing experiment? Is it true that animal testing is of practical help to human testing? |
All animal experiments will be conducted only after the Animal Ethics Council has thoroughly reviewed the 3R rules. Do you agree? |
| Analysis |
Organize information into the main theme or argument. |
Is this what the opposition team means when you summarize their arguments or objections? |
The animal experiment is said to be the way to save the lives of humans and other creatures. Is that right? |
Despite inflicting pain on living creatures, the animal experiment was still approved because the Animal Ethics Council also recognized the legitimacy and necessity of this experiment. Do you agree? |
| Evaluation |
Distinguish the value of each information. Identify priorities with important information. Distinguish between opinions and facts. |
If so, is the basis for the introductory argument so important? Which is more important? |
Do you admit that animal testing is an experiment that takes away more lives before saving other lives? |
Do you admit that animal testing that is verified through the Animal Ethics Council does not violate ethical aspects? |
| Questioning |
Consider other possible alternatives. Create a new hypothesis. |
Ask for another alternative. Ask for a new hypothesis. |
Do you admit that the percentage of diseases shared by humans and animals is only 1.16%, and there is only a 10% chance that humans will have the same results? |
Do you admit that the data accumulated so far through animal experiments in the past made it possible to develop current technologies for the alternatives? |
| Contextualization | Contextualizing information based on the following criteria: |
How do you mean this from a historical perspective? How do you mean this from an ethical perspective? How do you mean this from a cultural perspective? Continue to apply different areas of discipline for contextualization. |
Do you admit that animal testing is inefficient compared to the number of life losses from an economical perspective? |
Do you agree that it is difficult to ban animal testing to develop alternative technology? |
| Self-reflection |
Create questions and experiments about conclusions. Reflect on possible results. |
Does the result of the introduction lead to this reflection? |
Do you agree that the opposition’s statement that animal testing is helpful for human experiments is a rushed generalization and hence a systematic error? |
Do you agree that animal experiments can provide safety and be beneficial? Do you admit that there is a loophole in the propositional argument that animal testing is meaningless? |
The three steps of the confirmation questions before and after the clinic.
| Students’ Confirmation Questions before the Clinic | Focus of the Clinic Confirmation Questions | Students’ Confirmation Questions after the Clinic | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Animal testing should be prohibited. (Agree) |
You said that animal experiments could save the lives of humans and other creatures, but is it right to save lives at the expense of countless creatures’ sacrifices and deaths? | Instruct one confirmation question to be asked in at least three different stages like below. |
You said that animal experiments could save the lives of humanity and other creatures. Is that right? Do you agree that animal testing is an experiment that involves killing a life? Do you agree that animal testing is an experiment that takes away more lives before saving lives? |
|
Is it a selfish human way of thinking to continue conducting animal experiments that already have inaccuracies simply because they may be helpful to humans? |
You said that animal testing is of practical help (provide numerical data sample) for human testing. Is that right? However, the statistics indicate that the percentage of diseases shared by humans and animals is 1.16%, and among those diseases, only 10% of humans are likely to have the same results as animals. Do you admit that animal testing can be inefficient compared to the number of lives lost? Therefore, do you admit that the opposition’s argument that animal testing is of practical help to human experiments is a hasty generalization error? | ||
|
Our generation is developing many alternative technologies to replace animal testing. Is it outdated to ignore the effectiveness and possibility of these substitutes and continue animal testing? |
You said that animal testing should continue for humans (or that it is irreplaceable). Is that right? However, do you agree that many alternative technologies (simplified in the case of introduction) can replace some animal testing? Do you admit that continuing animal testing ignoring the effectiveness and possibility of alternatives can be considered outdated? | ||
| Animal testing should be prohibited. (Disagree) |
You said animals are living beings who can equally feel pain, but humans are also living beings with pain receptors. If there is one medicine that can immediately reduce pain, would you like to administer it to animals or humans? If you must choose only one living being, do you agree that you would put humans before animals? | Instruct one confirmation question to be asked in at least three different stages like below. |
You said animal testing was unethical because more than 70% of animal experiments involve pain. Is that right? All animal experiments will be conducted only after the Animal Ethics Council has thoroughly reviewed them according to the 3R rules. In other words, animal experiments involving pain were approved because the Animal Ethics Council also recognized the legitimacy and necessity of the experiment. Do you agree? Do you admit that animal testing through the Animal Ethics Council does not violate the agreed scope of ethical aspects? |
|
You said that it is meaningless to conduct animal experiments to test a chemical substance that is fatal to humans but not harmful to animals. Then, do you disregard the significance of widely used medicine that went through animal testing to prove that it is safe to be used? Does it mean that animal testing is not meaningless when you reverse this logic? |
You said that it is meaningless to conduct animal experiments if we are testing a chemical substance that is fatal to humans but not harmful to animals. Is that true? If the medicine is proven safe to use after animal testing, do you agree that the medicine can be used widely for greater causes? Do you admit that there is a loophole in the propositional argument that animal testing is meaningless? | ||
|
Alternative experimental methods also have errors, and artificial skin or cell multiplication has its own limitations because they are not real human skin and not real human cells. Can you argue that such an alternative technology is good enough to replace animal testing? |
You said animal testing should be prohibited and replaced by the technological development of alternative tests. Is that correct? Do you admit that the data accumulated so far through animal experiments in the past made it possible to develop current alternative technologies? Do you then agree that it is difficult to ban animal testing even for the advancement of alternative technologies? | ||
| The Paris Climate Change Agreement is effective. (Agree) |
You mentioned the difference between China and the US and that the level of carbon emissions in the States has decreased even though the US has withdrawn from the Paris Convention. Is that right? You said that China’s carbon emissions increased despite being included in the Paris Climate Agreement, but is this also correct? | Instruct one confirmation question to be asked in at least three different stages like below. |
You cited the difference between China and the US, saying that despite the US withdrawal from the Paris Convention and China’s participation in the Agreement, the levels of carbon emissions decreased in the US, whereas they increased in China. Is that right? Currently, China’s industry operates without considering environmental sustainability due to national policies. Do you agree with this? China is facing a problem arising from national policy, and this is a separate matter to joining the Paris Convention. Subsequently, it is contradictory to discuss the effectiveness of the Paris Convention by simply referring to the statistical difference between China and the US. Do you agree? |
|
The US unilaterally withdrew from the agreement and said it expected the convention’s promise of supporting developing countries to be broken. Is that correct? Then, do you think developed countries are doing others a favor by promising to support developing countries? Or is it their duty to help them? You said the US is taking an eco-friendly step to reduce carbon emissions after withdrawing from the Convention. Then, do you think they are fulfilling their responsibilities? |
The US unilaterally withdrew from the agreement and said it expected the promise of supporting developing countries to be destroyed. Is that true? The US is not the only country that promised to support developing countries. Do you agree? You are certain that the US’s decision to breach the agreement in support of developing countries would affect other developed countries to cut their support. Do you acknowledge that this is a mistaken judgment call made from a hasty generalization? | ||
| The Paris Climate Change Agreement is effective. (Disagree) |
Comparing the Kyoto Protocol with the Paris Convention, you mentioned that the Paris Convention expanded the applicable countries to all relevant parties from the Kyoto Protocol. Is that correct? You said this fact guarantees the effectiveness of the Paris Convention. Is that right? Do you mean that quantitative increases guarantee qualitative increases? Before we move on to the next question, I want to point out that this is committing an inconsistent error in failing to identify a specific causal relationship between the premise and the conclusion. | Instruct one confirmation question to be asked in at least three different stages, as below.Step 1: Check if you have listened to the other person properly and imply your understanding of the content of the question. |
Comparing the Kyoto Protocol with the Paris Convention, you claimed that the Paris Convention expanded the applicable countries to all relevant parties from the Kyoto Protocol. Is that correct? Do you agree that quantitative increases do not guarantee qualitative increases? Do you admit that your stated facts are inconsistent with providing a specific causal relationship between the premise and the conclusion? |
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Regarding the measures to reduce greenhouse gases, you mentioned that developed countries need to support developing countries in the following areas: financial help, technology transfer, and nurturing capacities. Is that true? If so, developing countries are objects that simply accept the financial resources, technology, and capacity training from developed countries. Is that right? If so, the Paris Convention creates a skewed power play within the international community because of the contents of the Convention. Is that right? Then, the power dynamics, which had not been highlighted before, will rise to the surface. Do you agree? Our agreement team would like to point out the bigger problem that the implementation of the Paris Climate Agreement will cause. It will give powerful authority and advantages to certain individual countries in the international community and act as a negotiating card. |
You mentioned that financial resources, technology transfer, and capacity training from developed countries to developing countries could be used to reduce greenhouse gases. Is that right? Then, do you admit that developing countries would become objects that simply accept resources, technology transfer, and capacity training from developed countries, which can lead to a power play within the international community? Do you agree that the Paris Climate Agreement’s implementation processes for reducing greenhouse gasses will provide a powerful advantage to certain individual countries in the international community and act as a negotiating card? | ||
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You took the World Bank as an example of support for developing countries to cultivate competency. Is that right? You said that the World Bank invests more money into projects to reduce carbon emissions. Is that right? You mentioned that this investment is not just an investment but a bond that expects a return at the end. Is that correct? If the opposition calls for the implementation of the Paris Convention’s true efforts, the World Bank’s investment should remain as an investment, and the relationship between investors and local business operators should be different from the relationship between creditors and debtors. Is that true? We can deduce that the Paris Convention will eventually be a political or economic negotiation card by indebting the developing countries using the standards of a global organization (the World Bank). This method of pretending to give developing countries sovereignty but forcing them to enter international politics where they would always be indebted is something to be reflected upon. |
As an example of support for developing countries to cultivate their capabilities, you said that the World Bank invests a lot of money in projects to reduce carbon emissions in these countries. However, this is a bond that is expected to be returned and not a simple investment; is that true? Do you agree that it is no different from inducing a relationship between creditors and debtors as developed countries use the standards of globally influential organizations (such as the World Bank) to indebt developing countries? In other words, do you agree that the World Bank’s investment is not a pure investment and can be a way to pressure the developing countries to join international politics while pretending to give them autonomy? |