Teaching Molecular Diffusion Using an Inquiry Approach. Diffusion Activities in a Secondary School Inquiry-Learning Community

Lisette van Rens and Joop van der Schee
Centre for Educational Training, Assessment, and Research, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
Albert Pilot
Freudenthal Institute for Science and Mathematics Education, Utrecht University, Utrecht, The Netherlands
J. Chem. Educ., 2009, 86 (12), p 1437
DOI: 10.1021/ed086p1437
Publication Date (Web): December 1, 2009

Abstract

This design research describes the development of a student inquiry project in which upper-secondary school chemistry students learn domain-specific concepts by doing inquiry in a simulated inquiry community. The design of the inquiry project is based on the extended procedural and conceptual knowledge in science (PACKS) model; the student inquiry-learning process is considered to be cyclic and iterative. Five teachers collaborated and developed a student inquiry project, Diffusion: Moving Particles. An inquiry community of 80 upper-secondary school chemistry students (ages 16–17) at four schools was established. Our data show that implementing the project improved student understanding of domain-specific concepts. Key activities included: brainstorming; prediction, observation, and explanation in a demonstration experiment; doing a guided experiment; judging an example research article; creating an inquiry plan; and reporting the inquiry findings. We hypothesize that domain-specific student learning occurs because of the authentic character of the successive inquiry actions. Further research is needed on the impact on students' domain-specific learning when they participate in a real science research community.

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History

  • Received: August 03, 2009

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