• Title/Summary/Keyword: Discussion Learning

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The Influence of Small Group Discussion on the Science Writing Ability of Elementary School Students (토론 활동이 초등학생의 과학글쓰기 능력에 미치는 영향)

  • Shin, Youngsik;Jhun, Youngseok
    • Journal of The Korean Association For Science Education
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    • v.32 no.7
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    • pp.1109-1123
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    • 2012
  • The purpose of this study is to examine the effects of small group discussion on elementary students' science writing. In this study, four 6th grade students were chosen from an elementary school in Seoul. Students were involved in eight science writing classes and the contents of a small group discussion and interactions were recorded and observed. Students' science works were collected and analysed based on three domains: scientific thinking, logic and originality. The result of this study showed that the contents of a small group discussion greatly affected the scientific thinking domain. A low-achieving student received lots of help from a high-achieving student. It was easy to improve in the logic domain through the science writing classes. Average students got good grades in an originality domain when the subject was related to their real life. A small group discussion would have an effect on science writing ability positively if the students acquired proper guidance on the procedure and manner of discussion. The science writing lesson would be more effective if the learning group was organized homogeneously in the aspects of intelligence achievement and interpersonal relationships.

Learning Effect Analysis for Flipped Learning based Computer Use Instruction (플립드 러닝 기반 컴퓨터 활용 수업의 학습 효과 분석)

  • Heo, Seo Jeong;Son, Dong Cheul;Kim, Chang Suk
    • Journal of the Korea Convergence Society
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    • v.8 no.1
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    • pp.155-162
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    • 2017
  • This paper suggests efficient learning improvement method of computer use instruction based on flipped learning. Traditional computer use classes were difficult to practice and collaborative with sufficient lectures. However, we used KOCW (Korea Open Courseware) as a footsteps in the class using the flipped learning method and learned in advance before entering the classroom. In the classroom, we conducted collaborative hands on class based on mutual discussion. After the instruction, we measured learning motivation and satisfaction by gender, grade, and major using the motivation test tool. The results showed that degree of attention awareness, perception of class relevance and perception of learning satisfaction were analyzed as 'very satisfied' and 'satisfied' more than 90%.

The Preference of Instructional Methods and Kolb's Learning Styles of Nursing Students (간호대학생의 교수방법 선호도와 Kolb의 학습유형)

  • Woo, Chung Hee;Park, Ju-young
    • Journal of Digital Convergence
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    • v.14 no.10
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    • pp.339-348
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    • 2016
  • The purpose of this study was to identify the Kolb's learning style and preference for instructional methods of undergraduate nursing students. Data were collected from 174 students at a university in D city using a structured questionnaire from October 19 to October 21 2015. Learning style ratio of nursing students was accommodator 34.5%, converger 33.9%, assimilator 16.1%, diverger 15.5% and preference scores for instructional methods were discussion 7.27, direct instruction 7.26, peer teaching 7.22, independent study 6.54, project 6.25, instruction through technology 5.77, game 5.45, simulation 4.23. A significant difference was found in experience of flipped learning between four learning styles groups of nursing students. However, there was no significant difference in the preference of instructional methods between the four learning styles groups. Most of the students were in the middle range of the learning styles. The assessment of nursing students' learning styles is expected to help educator to plan teaching strategies.

A Study on the Strategies for the Development of Lifelong Learning City (평생학습도시 사이버네트워크 시스템 구축 방향 탐색)

  • Byun, Jong-Im;Lee, Jae-Kyung;Yang, Hueung-Kwon
    • The Journal of Korean Association of Computer Education
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    • v.10 no.4
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    • pp.61-71
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    • 2007
  • The Lifelong Learning City Project whose aim is to encourage regional innovation and development by the Ministry of Education & HRD. As of in 2006, there are 57 Lifelong Learning Cities which are providing its citizens with various lifelong learning programs since the project got started in 2001. The Lifelong Learning City Project has been increasing across the nation since it has been regarded as a key strategy for the sustainable reg ional development. Accordingly, there has been a lot of discussion on how to develop the project qualitatively as well as quantitatively. In this context, this study aims to draw policy implications of the Cyber Network System for the lifelong learning cities. With this context, this paper suggests to set up the Cyber Network System as the developmental strategy of learning cities and intends to search how to structure the Cyber network System. For this purpose, we survey the learners' needs and suggest the directions for the further Cyber network System of the Learning Cities.

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Discriminant Analysis of IT-Gifted and Average Primary School Students according to Learning Style (학습 양식에 따른 초등 정보영재와 일반아의 판별기능 분석)

  • Kim, Yong;Seo, JeongHee;Kim, JaMee;Kim, JongHye;Cha, SeungEun;Yoo, SeungWook;Yeum, YongChul;Jang, HyeSun;Lee, WonGyu
    • The Journal of Korean Association of Computer Education
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    • v.10 no.2
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    • pp.9-16
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    • 2007
  • The purpose of this research is to suggest effective teaching and learning method suitable for IT-gifted primary school students based on their learning style. This study investigated the means of identifying IT-gifted students by comparing IT-gifted's learning style with average student's. Grasha-Reichmann Student Learning Style Inventory was used, which was proved to identify gifted IT students with 66.45% accuracy. As a result, The learning style of IT-gifted was determined as independent, competitive, participant Therefore, self-directed learning methods seem to be suitable for IT-gifted. IT-gifted also need to have more opportunities to participate in learning activities and discussion with their peers.

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The Relationship between Cognitive Conflicts and Commognitive Conflicts in Mathematical Discussion (수학적 토론에서 의사소통적 갈등과 인지 갈등의 관계)

  • Oh, Taek Keun;Park, Mimi;Lee, Kyeong Hwa
    • Journal of Educational Research in Mathematics
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    • v.24 no.2
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    • pp.125-143
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    • 2014
  • In this study, we analyzed a mathematical discussion in the Calculus II course of the Gifted Science Academy and individual interviews to determine the relationship between cognitive conflicts and commognitive conflicts. The mathematical discussion began with a question from a student who seemed to have a cognitive conflict about the osculating plane of a space curve. The results indicated that the commognitive conflicts were resolved by ritualizing and using the socially constructed knowledge, but cognitive conflicts were not resolved. Furthermore, we found that the cause of the cognitive conflict resulted from the student's imperfect analogical reasoning and the reflective discourse about it could be a learning opportunity for overcoming the conflict. These findings imply that cognitive conflicts can trigger the appearance of commognitive conflicts, but the elimination of commognitive conflicts does not imply that cognitive conflicts are resolved.

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Characteristics of Social Interaction in Scientific Modeling Instruction on Combustion in Middle School (연소의 과학적 모형형성 수업에서 나타난 중학생의 사회적 상호작용 특징)

  • Park, HyunJu;Kim, HyeYeong;Jang, Shinho;Shim, Youngsook;Kim, Chan-Jong;Kim, Heui-Baik;Yoo, Junehee;Choe, Seung-Urn;Park, Kyung-Mee
    • Journal of the Korean Chemical Society
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    • v.58 no.4
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    • pp.393-405
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    • 2014
  • The purpose of this study was to investigate the characteristics of social interaction on cultural aspects, verbal interaction, and discussion maps in scientific modeling instruction on combustion in middle school. Revised-CLEQ (Cultural Learning Environment Questionnaire), verbal interaction framework, discussion maps analysis were implemented for this study. The results of study follow respectively. First, the characteristics on cultural aspects of middle school students showed cooperation rather than competition in terms of collectivism. Students' attitudes to learning science tended to depend on others' idea, and students were passive and reluctant to present their comments when they were modeling work. Second, for the characteristics of verbal interaction, they simply presented knowledge related to build a model. The response to comments and feedback was relatively few. Third, discussion maps showed a lot of interaction for reponses that was alternatively brought the concept of commenters, which students were depended on a specific one, and responses. There were not many interaction for elaboration, which were described to have new presented ideas, corrections, and reasons when they exchange their ideas. In this study the model type of interaction affecting the formation of the students understanding of and in our country, it makes a lot of social interactions as the basis for teaching system could be utilized.

Teaching Methodology for Future Mathematics Classroom:Focusing on Students' Generative Question in Ill-Structured Problem (미래학교 수학교실의 교육 방법론에 대한 탐색:비구조화된 문제에서 학생들의 질문 만들기를 중심으로)

  • Na, Miyeong;Cho, Hyungmi;Kwon, Oh Nam
    • The Mathematical Education
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    • v.56 no.3
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    • pp.301-318
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    • 2017
  • This paper explores students' question generation process and their study in small group discussion. The research is based on Anthropological Theory of the Didactic developed by Chevallard. He argues that the savior (knowledge) we are dealing with at school is based on a paradigm that we prevail over whether we 'learn' or 'study' socially. In other words, we haven't provided students with autonomous research and learning opportunities under 'the dominant paradigm of visiting works'. As an alternative, he suggests that we should move on to a new didactic paradigm for 'questioning the world a question', and proposes the Study and Research Courses (SRC) as its pedagogical structure. This study explores the SRC structure of small group activities in solving ill-structured problems. In order to explore the SRC structure generated in the small group discussion, one middle school teacher and 7 middle school students participated in this study. The students were divided into two groups with 4 students and 3 students. The teacher conducted the lesson with ill-structured problems provided by researchers. We collected students' presentation materials and classroom video records, and then analyzed based on SRC structure. As a result, we have identified that students were able to focus on the valuable information they needed to explore. We found that the nature of the questions generated by students focused on details more than the whole of the problem. In the SRC course, we also found pattern of a small group discussion. In other words, they generated questions relatively personally, but sought answer cooperatively. This study identified the possibility of SRC as a tool to provide a holistic learning mode of small group discussions in small class, which bring about future mathematics classrooms. This study is meaningful to investigate how students develop their own mathematical inquiry process through self-directed learning, learner-specific curriculum are emphasized and the paradigm shift is required.

High School Students' Understanding of Astronomical Concepts Using the Role-playing and Discussion in Small Groups (소집단 역할놀이와 토의를 통한 고등학생들의 천문개념 이해)

  • Jung, Nam-Sik;Woo, Jong-Ok;Jeong, Jin-Woo
    • Journal of The Korean Association For Science Education
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    • v.16 no.1
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    • pp.61-76
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    • 1996
  • The purpose of this study was to apply the instructional strategies for conceptual change prescribed by Posner et al(1982) to the astronomic content domain taught in the elementary and middle school and to analyze the characteristics of students' knowledge revealed in the test before, during and after the instruction. Also, it was to investigate the intercorrelation of cognitive levels, spatial ability and science achievement. The major findings of this study are as follows: 1. Students had a great variety of misconceptions related to the motion of the moon before the instruction, that is, the phases, the names of phases and the cause of changing phases by the moon's orbit about the earth, the moon's appearance and location at the given time, the relative positions of earth, moon and sun during a lunar eclipse, the cause that a full moon is not at the line of node once a month. In the analysis of students' responses concerning the cause of changing phases of the moon and a lunar eclipse, the results indicate that the great majority of students had rote learning rather than meaningful learning in the middle school. 2. Students' reponses during the instruction concerning the changing phases of the moon and the predictive knowledge about the motions of the earth and the moon were analyzed. 1) According to the results of the test given before and after experiment, after discussion, achievement score of the whole of subjects and groups in both preformal and formal cognitive levels appeared to increase linearly. 2) There was no statistically significant differences of achievement scores before and after experiment, after discussion between preformal group and formal group in cognitive levels. 3. Distribution of achievement scores according to the whole of subjects and groups in preformal and formal cognitive levels shows that there was a statistically significant difference between pretest and posttest. 4. Types of conceptual changes concerning the cause of changing phases of the moon that occurred from pretest to posttest were classified as accommodation, incomplete accommodation, assimilation, no change and no model. Six of the seven students starting instruction with alternative frameworks didn't sustain those alternative models throughout instruction. Five of these six students accommodated completely and the last one partially. Seventy-nine percentage of students taking instruction with fragmental models assimilated correct propositions at the end of the instruction. These results suggest that conceptual change model prescribed by Posner et al(1982) has promised the meaningful learning to students taking with fragmental models, especially in cases where students with misconception enter instruction. 5. High correlation between achievement score of simple-recall items and that of written items in pretest and posttest indicates that the higher students got the score in simple-recall items the better they also performed in written items. However, there was no statistically significant differences among cognitive levels, spatial ability and science achievement in the whole of subjects and groups according to the cognitive levels.

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Innovative Technologies in Higher School Practice

  • Popovych, Oksana;Makhynia, Nataliia;Pavlyuk, Bohdan;Vytrykhovska, Oksana;Miroshnichenko, Valentina;Veremijenko, Vadym;Horvat, Marianna
    • International Journal of Computer Science & Network Security
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    • v.22 no.11
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    • pp.248-254
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    • 2022
  • Educational innovations are first created, improved or applied educational, didactic, educative, and managerial systems and their components that significantly improve the results of educational activities. The development of pedagogical technology in the global educational space is conventionally divided into three stages. The role of innovative technologies in Higher School practice is substantiated. Factors of effectiveness of the educational process are highlighted. Technology is defined as a phenomenon and its importance is emphasized, it is indicated that it is a component of human history, a form of expression of intelligence focused on solving important problems of being, a synthesis of the mind and human abilities. The most frequently used technologies in practice are classified. Among the priority educational innovations in higher education institutions, the following are highlighted. Introduction of modular training and a rating system for knowledge control (credit-modular system) into the educational process; distance learning system; computerization of libraries using electronic catalog programs and the creation of a fund of electronic educational and methodological materials; electronic system for managing the activities of an educational institution and the educational process. In the educational process, various innovative pedagogical methods are successfully used, the basis of which is interactivity and maximum proximity to the real professional activity of the future specialist. There are simulation technologies (game and discussion forms of organization); technology "case method" (maximum proximity to reality); video training methodology (maximum proximity to reality); computer modeling; interactive technologies; technologies of collective and group training; situational modeling technologies; technologies for working out discussion issues; project technology; Information Technologies; technologies of differentiated training; text-centric training technology and others.