Investigating the Characteristics of Knowledge-Related Learning Assignments in Upper Secondary School
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Theoretical Background
Characteristics of Assignments Promoting Collaborative Working with Knowledge
3. Aim and Research Questions
- (1)
- What are the characteristics of investigated assignments in upper secondary courses in relation to promoting competencies for collaborative working with knowledge?
- (2)
- What groups of pedagogical assignments can be identified in the investigated cases?
4. Materials and Methods
4.1. Context of the Study
4.2. Cases
4.3. Participants
4.4. Data Collection
4.4.1. Classroom Observations
4.4.2. Teacher Interviews
- (1)
- Issues related to the whole course: the aims, timing, student tasks and activities, and assessment practices.
- (2)
- Issues related to the knowledge-related assignment investigated: general description and organisation of the activities in the assignment; the role of the assignment as part of the overall course; aims; timing; the teacher’s and students’ responsibilities; the outcomes and their re-use; individual and collaborative activities; process working; information sources and their use; reflection, commenting and feedback; the role of external stakeholders; digital technology used; goals and assessment. The questions were based on the theoretical background. In addition, researchers asked clarifying questions about the lesson they observed.
4.4.3. Complementary Data
4.5. Data Analysis
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- -
- -
- -
- -
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5. Results
5.1. The Characteristics of the Knowledge-Related Assignments
5.2. Finding Clusters of Pedagogical Practices in the Cases
6. Discussion
Limitations of the Study
7. Conclusions and Implications
7.1. Theoretical Implications
7.2. Methodological Implications
7.3. Practical Implications
Author Contributions
Funding
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Sub-Category | Definition of the Levels of the Scales | Examples: 1 = Lowest Level, 4 = Highest Level | |
---|---|---|---|
Object-orientedness | |||
Tangible object | Existence of a shared object; level of teacher vs. student contribution | (1) No shared object (task given by the teacher, everyone did the same task). | |
(4) Students made a knowledge object (essay, presentation, video, poster, etc.) in groups aiming at influencing some issue (in society, in school, etc.). | |||
Re-use | Existence of re-use; broadness and scope of reuse | (1) No re-use. | |
(4) Students use the report created during the course and also during the second course (only those students who choose also the next, voluntary second course). | |||
Epistemic challenge | |||
Problem space | From well-defined to authentic ill-defined problems | (1) Ready-made questions to be answered, mainly factual and definition questions, with no real problems. | |
(4) Examination of the chosen phenomenon from the viewpoints of psychological science. | |||
Freedom of choice | Degree of freedom in the assignment | (1) Students did the tasks, decided by the teacher, in a pre-planned order. | |
(4) Students chose the topic (phenomenon) of their essays, the teacher gave suggestions; practising professional scientific writing. | |||
Nature of working practices | From knowledge acquisition to simulating professional or academic practices | (1) Arbitrary ways of working just for getting acquainted with the content; writing answers to teacher-created questions. | |
(4) Systematic teaching of academic, scientific writing and use of academic sources. | |||
Process-like emphasis | |||
Iterativeness | From no versioning to long-term and multiple versions | (1) The summary was written during one lesson; the teacher even encouraged them to write shortly and finalise the text quickly. Submission in the same evening. | |
(4) Students reflect on the course content through the country they chose to explore and prepare a project report throughout the course. Two checkpoints for improving the report. | |||
Reflection and feedback | Extent and versatility of reflection and feedback activities | (1) At the end of the course, the teacher asked students to submit their answers and commented on them. | |
(4) Groups gave feedback to each other; the teacher gave feedback during the process. Final work was reflected; everyone also evaluated their own work. | |||
Intensity of collaboration | |||
Sharing | Extent and versatility of sharing; sharing content and/or process | (1) No sharing between students, only to the teacher through Google Classroom. | |
(4) Students shared the outcomes first in their own group and then with other groups, students gave feedback to others in a discussion forum sharing their preliminary thoughts. | |||
Nature of group work | From voluntary collaboration and division of labour to organised collaborative working | (1) No collaboration. | |
(4) Students worked in groups and did the experiment together, with roles based on the task. Students also wrote a pre-study in pairs. | |||
Cross-fertilization | |||
Variation of information sources | From mere learning material to a rich variety of information sources | (1) School book and digital material; voluntary to use the web as an information source. | |
(4) Rich variety of different historical sources: books, newspapers, pictures and photos, radio programs, and authentic web sources. | |||
External collaboration | The intensity of external collaboration | (1) No external collaboration. | |
(3) * Not emphasised but some groups visited some organisations or made surveys or interviews for their work. | |||
Information practices | |||
Use of digital technology | Variation of digital technology, nature and intensity of using digital technology | (1) The teacher suggested using Google Docs for making group memos, but each group had the freedom to use technology as they liked or not use anything; oral presentations, no written guidelines, or digital platforms for sharing of outcomes. | |
(4) Web-based learning environment for sharing teaching materials (Edu 2.0); groups made the posters using presentation tools of their choice (PP, LibreOffice, Google doc); teaching of layout design. | |||
Guided information strategies | Systematic guidance of information strategies | (1) Not mentioned any strategies, self-directed search. | |
(4) Teacher very clearly presented the necessary materials, guiding material included, e.g., some examples for searching and guidelines on how to write references. | |||
Degree of multimodality | Variation of media types used and/or created | (1) Written answers/examination of claims and use of Internet resources, multimodality not emphasized. | |
(4) Pictures, academic texts (even advised not to use texts including opinions or propaganda), mind maps (created at the beginning of the process), and guidance to use YouTube videos. | |||
Assessment | |||
Explicit assessment criteria | From no criteria to clearly described assessment criteria | (1) Criteria not explained. | |
(4) Clearly explicated assessment criteria (in a matrix) used by the teacher and the students in peer review. | |||
Versatility of assessors | From no assessment to a variety of assessors and assessment methods | (1) Not assessed. | |
(4) Self-assessment of the group work process, peer assessment, and teacher assessment; teachers considered self and peer assessment results in their grading. | |||
Assessment of competencies of collaborative working with knowledge | Existence and relevance of assessing performance related to collaborative working with knowledge | (1) Not assessed. | |
(4) Part of the assessment was the self assessment for group work, using references, etc. |
Category | Mean | SD |
---|---|---|
Object-orientedness (OB) | ||
OB Tangible object | 2.5 | 1.2 |
OB Re-use of the outcome | 1.5 | 0.86 |
Epistemic challenge (EC) | ||
EC Problem space | 2.8 | 0.9 |
EC Freedom of choice | 2.1 | 0.98 |
EC Nature of working practices | 2.3 | 0.92 |
Process-like emphasis (PRO) | ||
PRO Iterativeness | 1.8 | 0.87 |
PRO Reflection and feedback | 2 | 0.96 |
Intensity of collaboration (COL) | ||
COL Sharing | 1.7 | 0.99 |
COL Nature of group work | 2.3 | 0.8 |
Cross-fertilisation (CF) | ||
CF Variety of information sources | 2.6 | 0.85 |
CF External collaboration | 1.1 | 0.43 |
Information practices (IP) | ||
IP Use of digital technology | 2.3 | 0.75 |
IP Guided information strategies | 2.4 | 1.1 |
IP Degree of multimodality | 2.4 | 1.1 |
Assessment (AS) | ||
AS Explicit assessment criteria | 2.2 | 1.1 |
AS Versatility of assessors | 2 | 0.89 |
AS Assessment of competencies of collaborative working with knowledge | 2 | 1.14 |
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Ilomäki, L.; Lakkala, M.; Muukkonen, H.; Paavola, S.; Toom, A. Investigating the Characteristics of Knowledge-Related Learning Assignments in Upper Secondary School. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 471. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050471
Ilomäki L, Lakkala M, Muukkonen H, Paavola S, Toom A. Investigating the Characteristics of Knowledge-Related Learning Assignments in Upper Secondary School. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(5):471. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050471
Chicago/Turabian StyleIlomäki, Liisa, Minna Lakkala, Hanni Muukkonen, Sami Paavola, and Auli Toom. 2023. "Investigating the Characteristics of Knowledge-Related Learning Assignments in Upper Secondary School" Education Sciences 13, no. 5: 471. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050471
APA StyleIlomäki, L., Lakkala, M., Muukkonen, H., Paavola, S., & Toom, A. (2023). Investigating the Characteristics of Knowledge-Related Learning Assignments in Upper Secondary School. Education Sciences, 13(5), 471. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13050471