Characterizing Discourse Group Roles in Inquiry-based University Science Labs

Tong Wan, Juliette Pimbert, Ying Cao, Pierre-Philippe A. Ouimet
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Abstract

Prior research has characterized students' group roles in introductory physics labs with a focus on what students are handling (e.g., equipment) and documented gender inequities in student division of labor. However, student discourse is rarely investigated in university science labs. We aim to bridge the gap in the literature by characterizing student discourse group roles in inquiry-based science labs. The instructional context for this study was a summer program hosted at a private research university in the eastern United States. The program was designed as a bridge program for matriculating students who were first generation and/or deaf or hard-of-hearing (DHH). Accommodations such as interpreters and technology were provided for DHH students. We analyzed 15 students' discourse moves in five lab activities from the video recordings, resulting in a total of 40 student-lab units. We developed codes to describe student discourse moves: asking a question, proposing an idea, participating in discussion, chatting off-task, and talking to instructor. We conducted a cluster analysis using those 40 student-lab units on our quantified discourse moves to characterize students' discourse styles (i.e., clusters). We identified four discourse styles, high on-task high social, high on-task low social, low on-task low social, and low on-task high social. The results show that individual students tend to demonstrate varying discourse styles in different lab activities; students' discourse styles within the same groups tend to be aligned with their group members. Moreover, no difference was observed in discourse styles between genders, but DHH students were observed to participate significantly less in group discourse. We propose that group-level interventions that specifically target discourse should be used to promote productive and equitable small-group discourse in university science labs.
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探究式大学科学实验室中的话语群体角色特征
先前的研究描述了学生在物理入门实验室中的小组角色,重点关注学生处理的内容(如设备),并记录了学生分工中的性别不平等现象。然而,在大学理科实验室中,学生的话语很少被研究。我们旨在通过描述以探究为基础的科学实验中学生话语小组角色的特点来弥补文献中的空白。本研究的教学背景是美国东部一所私立研究型大学举办的暑期项目。该课程是为第一代学生和/或聋人或重听(DHH)学生设计的桥梁课程。为 DHH 学生提供了翻译和技术等便利。我们从录像中分析了 15 名学生在五个实验活动中的话语活动,共得出 40 个学生实验单元。我们制定了描述学生话语动作的代码:提出问题、提出想法、参与讨论、任务外聊天和与教师交谈。我们利用这 40 个学生实验单元对量化的话语动作进行了聚类分析,以描述学生的话语风格(即聚类)。我们确定了四种话语风格:高任务高社交、高任务低社交、低任务低社交和低任务高社交。结果表明,学生个体往往会在不同的实验活动中表现出不同的话语风格;在同一小组中,学生的话语风格往往与小组成员一致。此外,我们没有观察到不同性别的学生在话语风格上存在差异,但观察到残疾学生在小组话语中的参与度明显较低。我们建议,在大学科学实验室中,应使用专门针对话语的小组级干预措施来促进富有成效和公平的小组话语。
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