TY - JOUR
T1 - How Peer Feedback After Hands-On Scientific Inquiry Activities Affects Students’ Scientific Inquiry Competence?
AU - Chi, Shaohui
AU - Wang, Zuhao
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.
PY - 2023/12
Y1 - 2023/12
N2 - This study explored how peer feedback after hands-on scientific inquiry (SI) activities affected students’ SI competence over time (6 weeks) by implementing an after-school intervention program in which 188 Chinese ninth-grade students (14–16 years old) participated during their first semester. A between-subject experimental design was used for data collection, with participants randomly assigned to one treatment group (N = 120) placed in pairs or one comparison group (N = 68). Held once a week, both groups of students participated in a 40-min hands-on performance assessment developed and validated to measure SI competence. Immediately after the assessment, the treatment group undertook a 20-min paired-peer feedback session, while the comparison group received 20 min of traditional whole-class teacher feedback. The results showed that (i) hands-on SI activities accompanied by either PF or traditional collective TF improve student SI competence significantly, (ii) the effect of hands-on inquiry activities accompanied by collective TF is delayed compared to PF, and (iii) the development of inquiry abilities through the hands-on activities varied within or between the two groups. The results also showed that the development of SI abilities varied through the hands-on SI activities within or between the two groups. This study sheds light on the optimal implementation of inquiry practices, especially for cultivating student SI competence.
AB - This study explored how peer feedback after hands-on scientific inquiry (SI) activities affected students’ SI competence over time (6 weeks) by implementing an after-school intervention program in which 188 Chinese ninth-grade students (14–16 years old) participated during their first semester. A between-subject experimental design was used for data collection, with participants randomly assigned to one treatment group (N = 120) placed in pairs or one comparison group (N = 68). Held once a week, both groups of students participated in a 40-min hands-on performance assessment developed and validated to measure SI competence. Immediately after the assessment, the treatment group undertook a 20-min paired-peer feedback session, while the comparison group received 20 min of traditional whole-class teacher feedback. The results showed that (i) hands-on SI activities accompanied by either PF or traditional collective TF improve student SI competence significantly, (ii) the effect of hands-on inquiry activities accompanied by collective TF is delayed compared to PF, and (iii) the development of inquiry abilities through the hands-on activities varied within or between the two groups. The results also showed that the development of SI abilities varied through the hands-on SI activities within or between the two groups. This study sheds light on the optimal implementation of inquiry practices, especially for cultivating student SI competence.
KW - Hands-on inquiry activities
KW - Hands-on performance assessment
KW - Peer feedback effect
KW - Rasch analysis
KW - Scientific inquiry competence
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/85162890644
U2 - 10.1007/s11165-023-10121-w
DO - 10.1007/s11165-023-10121-w
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:85162890644
SN - 0157-244X
VL - 53
SP - 1035
EP - 1061
JO - Research in Science Education
JF - Research in Science Education
IS - 6
ER -