Asia-Pacific Forum on Science Learning and Teaching, Volume 9, Issue 1, Article 1 (June, 2008)
Ling L. LIANG, Sufen CHEN, Xian CHEN, Osman Nafiz KAYA, April Dean ADAMS, Monica MACKLIN and Jazlin EBENEZER
Assessing preservice elementary teachers’ views on the nature of scientific knowledge: A dual-response instrument
 

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Assessing preservice elementary teachers’ views on the nature of scientific knowledge: A dual-response instrument

 

Ling L. Liang1,7, Sufen Chen2, Xian Chen3, Osman Nafiz Kaya4,
April Dean Adams
5, Monica Macklin5 and Jazlin Ebenezer6

  1La Salle University

Philadelphia, PA, USA

 

2National Taiwan University of Science and Technology

Taipei, TAIWAN

 

3Nanjing Normal University

Nanjing, P. R. CHINA

 

4Firat University

Elazig, TURKEY

 

5Northeastern State University

Tahlequah, OK, USA

 

6Wayne State University
Detroit, MI, USA

 

7Contact author

E-mail: liang@lasalle.edu

Received 1 Oct., 2007
Revised 25 Jan., 2008


Contents

Abstract

This paper presents the development and revision of a dual-response instrument entitled, “Student Understanding of Science and Scientific Inquiry (SUSSI).” Built on the most recent science education reform documents and existing literature on the nature of science, SUSSI blends Likert-type items and related open-ended questions to assess students’ views on the nature of scientific knowledge development in terms of six aspects: observations and inferences, tentativeness, scientific theories and laws, social and cultural embeddedness, creativity and imagination, and scientific methods.  This combined quantitative and qualitative approach is a form of triangulation, which can increase confidence in the findings and help us obtain a fuller understanding of the respondents’ views on the nature of scientific knowledge.


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