The effects of geographic information system (GIS) technologies on students' attitudes, self-efficacy, and achievement in middle school science classrooms | | Posted on:2003-07-08 | Degree:Ph.D | Type:Dissertation | | University:University of Kansas | Candidate:Baker, Thomas Ray | Full Text:PDF | | GTID:1467390011981936 | Subject:Education | | Abstract/Summary: | PDF Full Text Request | | Since the publication of the National Science Education Standards , a concerted and evolving movement to make science classrooms more inquiry-oriented has been building. The proliferation of models of teaching and learning where questions and investigations drive learning, while not new are also not easy to plan, implement, or evaluate. In order to make the vision of the Standards come to fruition, educators are calling on the tools of technology to support and foster the shift to scientific inquiry or classroom research.; The use of certain data analysis technologies have been suggested to be a particularly powerful ally in the struggle to extend classroom teaching and learning into the realm of problem-driven classroom inquiry. The use of a Geographic Information System (GIS), a technology allowing for the graphical representation of data with a geographic component seems to be one technology that can adequately bolster the dynamic and complex needs of the science classroom engaged in scientific inquiry.; In this study, eighth grade Earth science students studying relative, local air quality indicators were divided in two groups; a treatment group that utilized GIS-supported scientific inquiry and a control group that used traditional mapping techniques to support their study. Student attitudes regarding science and technology were measured with a pre/post instrument across the study. Individual student efforts were summarily evaluated with a modified Kansas Science Performance Based Assessment rubric.; During the two-week treatment, the students using the GIS-supported materials were found to show positive and significant improvements in science self-efficacy and attitudes toward technology. While female attitudes and self-efficacy were not found to change, males significantly improved on all affective factors. Students using GIS also performed significantly better than traditional mapping students on science process skills, specifically data analysis techniques. Instructor effects, despite controlling for the curriculum, instruction, and technology were still very strong. Results of the study suggest that GIS can enhance student outcomes when engaged in scientific inquiry, enriching student achievement through improved classroom data analysis activities. Finally, study implications direct future efforts to consider the need a science curriculum aimed at spatial reasoning and pattern seeking activities, ultimately allowing students to more completely leverage the powerful analytics of GIS and similar technologies. | | Keywords/Search Tags: | Science, GIS, Classroom, Students, Technologies, Attitudes, Geographic, Self-efficacy | PDF Full Text Request | Related items |
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