Geography's ability to enhance powerful thinking skills and knowledge

Q3 Social Sciences Nordia Geographical Publications Pub Date : 2022-02-18 DOI:10.30671/nordia.113997
Eerika Virranmäki
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This thesis acknowledges that geography involves much more than teaching and learning simple facts about world’s topography, regions, and places, which is how geography is usually understood in popular views. \nThe aim of this thesis is to widen our understanding of thinking skills and powerful knowledge in the context of geography education. Theoretically, the thesis brings together discussions of powerful geographical knowledge with thinking skills and knowledge dimensions from a revised version of Bloom’s taxonomy, and it suggests that these can be used as two “lenses” through which to examine geography. The main objective of the thesis is to examine geography’s potential to engage students in thinking skills and powerful geographical knowledge, using Finnish upper secondary geography education as an example. \nThis thesis is based on three individual research articles, and thus the empirical part of the thesis consists of multiple research materials: in-service upper secondary teachers’ concept maps and in-depth interviews; the geography test questions from the paper-based and digital forms of the Finnish matriculation examination between fall 2013 and spring 2019; students’ answers to the paper-based and digital geography test questions between fall 2015 and spring 2017; and learning objectives in upper secondary geography curricula documents from the years 2003, 2015, and 2019, which are examined through the qualitative research methodology approach. Both inductive and deductive content analysis are used as methods of analysis. Additionally, quantification, descriptive statistics, and statistical analyses are used to comprehensively understand the researched phenomenon. \nIn this compilation part of the thesis, the findings from the three original research articles are examined through the two “lenses” to reveal which geographical thinking skills and knowledge are emphasized. The findings suggest that the various thinking skills and knowledge dimensions, as well as powerful geographical knowledge types, are all present to some extent in Finnish geography’s learning objectives and test questions, students’ answers, and teachers’ conceptions. However, the majority of the learning objectives and test questions emphasize lower-order thinking skills, i.e. powerful geographical knowledge types 2 and 5. However, to some extent, teachers additionally emphasize higher-order thinking skills, i.e. powerful geographical knowledge types 1 and 4. The digitalization of the matriculation examination and the curriculum reforms slightly shifted the emphasis toward higher order thinking because the requirement to use analytical thinking skills—i.e. powerful geographical knowledge type 4—increased. Additionally, the findings suggest that students have difficulty answering questions that require them to use analytical (in digital tests only), evaluative, and creative thinking or procedural knowledge, i.e. powerful geographical knowledge types 4, 3, and 1. \nThe findings indicate that geography has the potential to enhance students’ higher-order thinking skills and engage them in powerful geographical knowledge, but further development is needed. First, there is a need to reevaluate the optimal distribution between lower- and higher-order thinking skills in the geography curriculum’s learning objectives and the geography test questions in the Finnish matriculation examination. Additionally, there is a need to engage geography teachers and students in reflection on thinking skills and powerful geographical knowledge. Moreover, there is a need to consider the possibility of placing more emphasis on higher-order thinking skills, because this will enable the development of students’ powerful geographical knowledge in greater depth. In conclusion, this thesis provides one perspective on geography education and presents one framework for understanding thinking skills and powerful knowledge in geography. This framework can be used to plan the aims of geography education, or to choose teaching artifacts, methods, or assessments tasks. Moreover, it can be applied in order to “speak the same language” so as to develop geography education, and above all to develop students’ powerful geographical knowledge and thinking skills. \nKeywords revised Bloom’s taxonomy, powerful geographical knowledge, upper secondary education, geography education, geography curriculum, learning objectives, summative assessment, teachers’ conceptions, students’ performance, higher-order thinking skills","PeriodicalId":34559,"journal":{"name":"Nordia Geographical Publications","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-02-18","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"1","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Nordia Geographical Publications","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.30671/nordia.113997","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"Q3","JCRName":"Social Sciences","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 1

Abstract

Finnish upper secondary geography education has faced major changes within the last decade. In 2014, geography lost one of its compulsory courses in the distribution of lesson hours. Afterward, curriculum reforms were conducted in 2015 and 2019, and the geography test in the Finnish matriculation examination was digitalized in 2016. Similar major changes have occurred across the globe over the last 20 years as geography’s position in schools has weakened. Therefore, geography educationists have engaged in discussion regarding the kinds of knowledge and thinking skills that geography encourages young people to learn during their years in school. This thesis acknowledges that geography involves much more than teaching and learning simple facts about world’s topography, regions, and places, which is how geography is usually understood in popular views. The aim of this thesis is to widen our understanding of thinking skills and powerful knowledge in the context of geography education. Theoretically, the thesis brings together discussions of powerful geographical knowledge with thinking skills and knowledge dimensions from a revised version of Bloom’s taxonomy, and it suggests that these can be used as two “lenses” through which to examine geography. The main objective of the thesis is to examine geography’s potential to engage students in thinking skills and powerful geographical knowledge, using Finnish upper secondary geography education as an example. This thesis is based on three individual research articles, and thus the empirical part of the thesis consists of multiple research materials: in-service upper secondary teachers’ concept maps and in-depth interviews; the geography test questions from the paper-based and digital forms of the Finnish matriculation examination between fall 2013 and spring 2019; students’ answers to the paper-based and digital geography test questions between fall 2015 and spring 2017; and learning objectives in upper secondary geography curricula documents from the years 2003, 2015, and 2019, which are examined through the qualitative research methodology approach. Both inductive and deductive content analysis are used as methods of analysis. Additionally, quantification, descriptive statistics, and statistical analyses are used to comprehensively understand the researched phenomenon. In this compilation part of the thesis, the findings from the three original research articles are examined through the two “lenses” to reveal which geographical thinking skills and knowledge are emphasized. The findings suggest that the various thinking skills and knowledge dimensions, as well as powerful geographical knowledge types, are all present to some extent in Finnish geography’s learning objectives and test questions, students’ answers, and teachers’ conceptions. However, the majority of the learning objectives and test questions emphasize lower-order thinking skills, i.e. powerful geographical knowledge types 2 and 5. However, to some extent, teachers additionally emphasize higher-order thinking skills, i.e. powerful geographical knowledge types 1 and 4. The digitalization of the matriculation examination and the curriculum reforms slightly shifted the emphasis toward higher order thinking because the requirement to use analytical thinking skills—i.e. powerful geographical knowledge type 4—increased. Additionally, the findings suggest that students have difficulty answering questions that require them to use analytical (in digital tests only), evaluative, and creative thinking or procedural knowledge, i.e. powerful geographical knowledge types 4, 3, and 1. The findings indicate that geography has the potential to enhance students’ higher-order thinking skills and engage them in powerful geographical knowledge, but further development is needed. First, there is a need to reevaluate the optimal distribution between lower- and higher-order thinking skills in the geography curriculum’s learning objectives and the geography test questions in the Finnish matriculation examination. Additionally, there is a need to engage geography teachers and students in reflection on thinking skills and powerful geographical knowledge. Moreover, there is a need to consider the possibility of placing more emphasis on higher-order thinking skills, because this will enable the development of students’ powerful geographical knowledge in greater depth. In conclusion, this thesis provides one perspective on geography education and presents one framework for understanding thinking skills and powerful knowledge in geography. This framework can be used to plan the aims of geography education, or to choose teaching artifacts, methods, or assessments tasks. Moreover, it can be applied in order to “speak the same language” so as to develop geography education, and above all to develop students’ powerful geographical knowledge and thinking skills. Keywords revised Bloom’s taxonomy, powerful geographical knowledge, upper secondary education, geography education, geography curriculum, learning objectives, summative assessment, teachers’ conceptions, students’ performance, higher-order thinking skills
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增强地理能力的强大思维能力和知识
芬兰高中地理教育在过去十年中经历了重大变革。2014年,地理在课时分配上少了一门必修课程。随后,芬兰在2015年和2019年进行了课程改革,并于2016年将芬兰大学预科考试中的地理试题数字化。在过去的20年里,随着地理在学校中的地位被削弱,类似的重大变化在全球范围内也发生了。因此,地理教育家就地理鼓励年轻人在学校学习的知识和思维技能进行了讨论。这篇论文承认地理学所涉及的不仅仅是教授和学习关于世界地形、地区和地方的简单事实,这是人们通常对地理学的理解。本文的目的是拓宽我们在地理教育背景下对思维技能和强大知识的理解。从理论上讲,本文将布鲁姆分类法修订版中关于强大地理知识与思维技能和知识维度的讨论结合在一起,并建议这些可以作为研究地理的两个“镜头”。本文的主要目的是以芬兰高中地理教育为例,考察地理在培养学生思维能力和强大地理知识方面的潜力。本文基于三篇独立的研究文章,因此本文的实证部分由多种研究材料组成:在职高中教师的概念图和深度访谈;2013年秋季至2019年春季芬兰大学预科考试的纸质和数字形式的地理测试问题;2015年秋季至2017年春季学生地理笔试和数字地理答题情况;通过定性研究方法对2003年、2015年和2019年高中地理课程文件中的学习目标进行了研究。分析方法包括归纳分析和演绎分析。此外,量化,描述性统计和统计分析被用来全面了解研究现象。在这篇论文的汇编部分,通过两个“镜头”来检查三篇原创研究文章的发现,以揭示哪些地理思维技能和知识被强调。研究发现,在芬兰地理的学习目标和试题、学生的回答和教师的观念中,不同的思维技能和知识维度以及强大的地理知识类型都有不同程度的体现。然而,大多数的学习目标和试题强调低阶思维技能,即强大的地理知识类型2和5。但在某种程度上,教师还强调高阶思维技能,即强大的地理知识类型1和4。大学入学考试的数字化和课程改革将重点略微转向了高阶思维,因为要求学生运用分析思维技能,即:强大的地理知识类型4增加。此外,调查结果表明,学生在回答要求他们使用分析性(仅在数字测试中)、评价性和创造性思维或程序性知识(即强大的地理知识类型4、3和1)的问题时存在困难。研究结果表明,地理有潜力提高学生的高阶思维能力,并使他们参与强大的地理知识,但需要进一步发展。首先,有必要重新评估地理课程学习目标和芬兰大学预科考试地理试题中低阶和高阶思维技能之间的最佳分布。此外,还需要让地理教师和学生对思维技能和强大的地理知识进行反思。此外,有必要考虑更加强调高阶思维技能的可能性,因为这将使学生强大的地理知识得到更深入的发展。综上所述,本文为地理教育提供了一个视角,并提出了一个理解地理思维技能和强大知识的框架。该框架可用于规划地理教育的目标,或选择教学工具、方法或评估任务。此外,它可以用于“说同一种语言”,从而发展地理教育,最重要的是培养学生强大的地理知识和思维能力。 关键词修订的布鲁姆分类法,强大的地理知识,高中教育,地理教育,地理课程,学习目标,总结性评价,教师观念,学生表现,高阶思维能力
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来源期刊
Nordia Geographical Publications
Nordia Geographical Publications Social Sciences-Geography, Planning and Development
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
12
审稿时长
14 weeks
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