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Characterising a Representation Construction Pedagogy for Integrating Science and Mathematics in the Primary School

Tytler, Russell, Prain, Vaughan, Kirk, M, Mulligan, J, Nielsen, C, Speldewinde, Chris, White, Peta and Xu, Lihua 2022, Characterising a Representation Construction Pedagogy for Integrating Science and Mathematics in the Primary School, International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education, pp. 1-23, doi: 10.1007/s10763-022-10284-4.

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Title Characterising a Representation Construction Pedagogy for Integrating Science and Mathematics in the Primary School
Author(s) Tytler, RussellORCID iD for Tytler, Russell orcid.org/0000-0003-0161-7240
Prain, VaughanORCID iD for Prain, Vaughan orcid.org/0000-0001-5832-4727
Kirk, M
Mulligan, J
Nielsen, C
Speldewinde, ChrisORCID iD for Speldewinde, Chris orcid.org/0000-0002-0225-5934
White, PetaORCID iD for White, Peta orcid.org/0000-0003-3292-1296
Xu, Lihua
Journal name International Journal of Science and Mathematics Education
Start page 1
End page 23
Total pages 23
Publisher Springer
Place of publication Berlin, Germany
Publication date 2022
ISSN 1571-0068
1573-1774
Keyword(s) Guided inquiry pedagogy
Interdisciplinarity in mathematics and science
Multimodal learning
Representation construction
Transduction
Summary AbstractGrowing research evidence indicates student learning gains from guided representation construction/invention in school science and mathematics. In this inquiry approach, students address challenges around what features of a phenomenon/problem to attend to, what data to collect, how and why, and make collective judgments about multimodal accounts of phenomena. However, researchers to date have tended to focus on student learning rather than on the teacher’s role in guiding various phases of inquiry. In this paper we report on (a) analysis of Grade 1 students’ engagement in interdisciplinary mathematics and science inquiry practices in a classroom sequence in ecology; (b) the teacher’s role in guiding such inquiry; and (c) interpretation of these practices in terms of support of student transduction (connecting and remaking meanings across representations in different modes). Data from our study included video capture of two case study teachers’ guidance of tasks and classroom discussion and student artefacts. We examine the classroom processes through which the teachers used students’ invention and revision of data displays to teach the concepts of living things, diversity, distribution and adaptive features related to habitat in science. Mathematical processes included constructing and interpreting mapping, measurement and data modelling, sampling and using a scale. The analysis offers fresh insights into how teachers support student learning in these two subjects, through discrete stages of orienting, representation challenge, building consensus and applying and extending representational systems.
Language eng
DOI 10.1007/s10763-022-10284-4
Indigenous content off
Field of Research 1302 Curriculum and Pedagogy
HERDC Research category C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Free to Read? Yes
Persistent URL http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30172124

Document type: Journal Article
Collections: Faculty of Arts and Education
School of Education
Open Access Collection
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Every reasonable effort has been made to ensure that permission has been obtained for items included in DRO. If you believe that your rights have been infringed by this repository, please contact drosupport@deakin.edu.au.