Yngre elevers lärande om naturen En studie av kommunikation om modeller i institutionella kontexter
Abstract
Abstract
The aim of the study is to draw attention to and examine how young students (approximately 5-13 years) are involved in communication about nature, what approaches to nature are mediated in the social practices of preschool, school, and a science center, and how functional these approaches may be as providing learners with tools for making sense in other situations in everyday life and society. Empirical investigations were carried out by observations, tape recordings and video recordings of interaction in different educational contexts and presented in three studies. The first study is about a group of preschool children (5 years old) and their teacher visiting an exhibition about the water flow at a science center and the teacher communicating with the children about their visit during circle time at the preschool. The second study is about conversations about the water cycle between teachers and young students (8-10 years old) at a primary school, with a prop in the form of a photograph taken in a real rainforest. The third study is about students (12-13 years old) working in pairs in a computer-simulated micro world of ecological processes on an African savanna. Taking a sociocultural perspective, the results indicate that in all the studied contexts, the conversations between the students and teachers were characterized by being indistinct, i.e. not being conducted within a distinct discourse. The students had difficulties following the teachers’ communication strategies. It seemed to be important for the teachers that the students themselves understood what the conversation was about and to arrive at the right answer. Students’ possibility to express their knowledge is closely dependent on the adults’ strategies. The most successful strategy for students is to follow the teacher’s way of speaking. This leads to the fact that some students succeed to talk in such a way that is expected by the teacher in the conversation. When the teacher is absent the students make sense by referring to their previous experience. Without support by the teacher the students thus thematize nature on their own terms. In the investigated activities the models are handled as if being self-illustrative. Models, as such, and how they are related to what they refer to was never explained by the teachers in the studied activities.
Parts of work
Sträng, M. H., & Åberg-Bengtsson, L. (2009). ‘From the mountain
and then?’ Five-years-olds visiting the ‘Way of the water’ exhibition at a science
centre. International Journal of Early Childhood, 41(1), 13-31. DOI: 10.1007/BF03168483 Sträng, M. H., & Åberg-Bengtsson, L. (2010). “Where do you think
the water comes from?” Teacher-pupil dialogues about water as an
environmental phenomenon. Scandinavian Journal of Educational Research, 54(4),
313-333. doi.org/10.1080/00313831.2010.493340 Sträng, M. H. (manus). ”We don´t have any that eat others”:
Thirteen year olds interacting with a simulation of ecological processes of the
African savannah.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Education, Communication and Learning ; Institutionen för pedagogik, kommunikation och lärande
Disputation
Måndag den 6 maj 2013, kl. 13.00, sal BE 014
Date of defence
2013-05-06
monica.strang@ped.gu.se
Date
2013-04-15Author
Haraldsson Sträng, Monica
Keywords
young students
communication
social practice
mediation
meaning-making
nature
models
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7346-740-7
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Educational Sciences
332
Language
swe