• Title/Summary/Keyword: scientific rule-discovering

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Relationships between Types of Emotional Words and Abilities of Science-Knowledge Generation in Students' Scientific Observation and Rule-Discovery (과학적 관찰과 규칙성 발견 활동에서 나타나는 감성단어 유형과 과학 지식 생성력과의 관계)

  • Kwon, Yong-Ju;Shin, Dong-Hoon;Han, Hye-Young;Park, Yun-Bok
    • Journal of The Korean Association For Science Education
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    • v.24 no.6
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    • pp.1106-1117
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    • 2004
  • The purposes of this study were to analyze types of scientific emotion word and to investigate the relationship between the ISE(Index of Scientific Emotion) and the ability of science-knowledge generation in subjects' scientific observation and rule-discovery. The subjects were asked to perform four scientific tasks. The tasks were developed that are suitable for scientific observation and rule-discovery. In performing tasks, the subjects were asked to describe their generated science-knowledge and scientific emotion through self-report questionnaire, performing each task. The strength of their scientific emotion was also measured using adjective emoticon check lists. In subjects' scientific observing, they showed 33.3% of interest emotion which was the biggest, 15.0% of acceptance emotion, and 11.3% of love emotion, respectively. In scientific rule-discovering, types of emotion were shown as 23.8% of interest, 21.5% of disgust, and 10.8% of acceptance, respectively. In addition, ability of science-knowledge generation was significantly correlated to ISE.

A Grounded Theory on the Process of Scientific Rule-Discovery- Focused on the Generation of Scientific Pattern-Knowledge (과학적 규칙성 지식의 생성 과정: 경향성 지식의 생성을 중심으로)

  • 권용주;박윤복;정진수;양일호
    • Journal of Korean Elementary Science Education
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    • v.23 no.1
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    • pp.61-73
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    • 2004
  • The purpose of this study was to suggest a grounded theory on the process of undergraduate students' generating pattern-knowledge about scientific episodes. The pattern-discovery tasks were administered to seven college students majoring in elementary education. The present study found that college students show five types of procedural knowledge represented in the process of pattern-discovery, such as element, elementary variation, relative prior knowledge, predictive-pattern, and final pattern-knowledge. Furthermore, subjects used seven types of thinking ways, such as recognizing objects, recalling knowledges, searching elementary variation, predictive-pattern discovery, confirming a predictive-pattern, combining patterns, and selecting a pattern. In addition, pattern-discovering process involves a systemic process of element, elementary variation, relative prior knowledge, generating and confirming predictive-pattern, and selecting final pattern-knowledge. The processes were shown the abductive and deductive reasoning as well as inductive reasoning. This study also discussed the implications of these findings for teaching and evaluating in science education.

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