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    An Evaluation of Meaningful Learning in a High School Chemistry Course

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    Genre
    Thesis/Dissertation
    Date
    2008
    Author
    Bross, April Joyce
    Advisor
    Schmuckler, Joseph S., 1927-
    Committee member
    Fitt, David
    Caldwell, Corrinne A.
    Shapiro, Joan Poliner
    Ketelhut, Diane Jass
    Department
    CITE/Language Arts
    Subject
    Education, Sciences
    Chemistry, General
    Permanent link to this record
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12613/3712
    
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    DOI
    http://dx.doi.org/10.34944/dspace/3694
    Abstract
    This study utilized an action research methodology to examine students' understandings of science knowledge, and meaningful learning using the SLD (Science Lecture Demonstration) and laboratory instructional method in a high school chemistry classroom. This method was a modification of the Science Lecture Demonstration Method as developed by Majerich and Schmuckler (2004, in press), the modification due to the addition of a laboratory component. The participants in this study represented a convenience sample which included one class of twenty-two, middle to high socio-economic status students (Mean family income over $75,000/year in 2005 U.S. dollars) in an honors chemistry course at a public high school in the state of New Jersey. These participants included nine girls and thirteen boys. The results of this study indicated what the students' understandings of science knowledge were, how the understandings differed among students, and to what extent those understandings were indicative of meaningful learning. These results were obtained by careful analysis of student generated concept maps, narratives from demonstration quizzes, laboratory reports, and test questions, as well as a teacher/researcher reflection upon the classroom experience. A simple taxonomy for analyzing students' understandings of science knowledge was developed, based upon the work of Majerich (2004). Findings indicated that the students' understanding of science knowledge, as well as the extent of meaningful learning that occurs in the chemistry classroom may be influenced by the roles of : explicit directions, pre-existing knowledge from elementary and middle school science classes, using examples vs. non-examples, macroscopic vs. microscopic views of nature, time for reflection, and everyday vs. scientific language. Results obtained from high school student responses confirmed Novak's observation of elementary students' lack of differentiation between the terms vapor and gas (Novak, 1998).
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