Assessing Conceptual Understanding via Literacy-Infused, Inquiry-Based Science among Middle School English Learners and Economically-Challenged Students
Abstract
:1. Literacy-Infused, Inquiry-Based Science for ELs and ECs
2. Conceptual Understanding: Big Ideas in Science for ELs and ECs
… big ideas help students better understand and connect science content and processes. They serve as motivators that pull students into learning about science; they help answer the “So what?” question. Big ideas are organizing principles around which students can arrange facts, concepts, processes, and applications they encounter during learning. Big ideas also help students make connections within and across science units, as well as with other areas of interest and learning.[36] (p. 43)
First, it must be a key organizing principle within the discipline or across several disciplines; that is, it should be a core idea in the eyes of scientists. Second, it must have broad explanatory power: It should help learners understand and be able to reason about an array of phenomena and problems in the discipline. In this sense, it needs to be a useful thinking tool that is generative for students, and it should help them think about phenomena and problems they may encounter in and out of the classroom, both now and in their future. Third, a DCI needs to be relevant and meaningful for students. It should relate to phenomena and problems that students find intriguing. Fourth, the idea needs to have depth that allows for continued learning over the course of schooling.[39] (p. 68)
Sometimes what children know is rooted in a misconception, and this becomes a barrier to new learning. Childhood misconceptions can become barriers to adult science learning unless they are addressed directly. …In addition to the role of prior knowledge, learning researchers have discovered that factual knowledge must be placed in a conceptual framework to be well understood. This is the big idea or the overarching core concept that, when unpacked, leads to discrete facts.[35] (pp. 12–15)
3. Purpose of the Study
4. Methods
5. Participants
6. Research Questions
- Is there concurrent validity of the BISA as determined by a relationship between the students’ scores on the BISA and their science benchmark assessment among sixth grade ELs and non-EL-EC students, respectively?
- Is there a statistically significant difference in the post-test of the BISA between treatment and control ELs, controlling for their performance in the pre-test?
- Is there a statistically significant difference in the post-test of the BISA between treatment and control non-EL EC students, controlling for their performance in the pre-test?
- Is there a statistically significant relationship between students’ English language proficiency as measured by a standardized assessment, and their performance in the BISA among ELs and non-EL-EC students, respectively?
7. Intervention as It Relates to the BISA
8. Instruments
9. Data Collection and Analysis
10. Results
11. Discussion
When planning lessons, it is important for teachers to have in mind how the goals of individual lessons fit into a wider picture of more powerful ideas that can help students make sense of a broad range of related phenomena and events.[47] (p. 6)
- Literacy-infused science lessons with big ideas, implemented through the tested intervention, improved students’ language acquisition and science concept understanding for ELs and ECs. These learning experiences focused closely on what EL and EC students needed to learn in a specific science unit and how teachers needed to scaffold the concepts and the academic language of science with them.
- There was a positive relationship between language and content for both ELs and non-EL ECs, with a similar magnitude, suggesting that students with a higher English proficiency (literacy) score higher in science assessments. This seems to be a logical finding as it seems reasonable that higher rates of literacy in the language of instruction of a subject area would yield higher rates of achievement in the content subject. It is reasonable then to consider that students would be able to demonstrate literacy (reading, speaking, listening, and writing) in the specific subject. ELs whose native language is Spanish and EC students whose native language is English, as presented in the beginning of the paper, generally underperform in national assessments (e.g., NAEP) compared to their non-EL and non-EC peers. Therefore, we advocate that academic literacy is critical not only for ELs, but also for EC students, since our finding is that a higher proficiency in academic English literacy is associated with higher science achievement. This finding aligns with a previous study derived from the same project with grade 5 students [6], and can be supported by theorists (e.g., [63]) and researchers (e.g., [64]) who have reported the association between academic language and conceptual understanding. Such a finding further indicates the importance of integrating literacy into science teaching for both ELs and EC students, because with such integrated instructional practices, students are encouraged to practice the four language skills (listening, speaking, reading, and writing), while simultaneously developing a strong base for establishing background knowledge and vocabulary, thereby promoting academic achievement [27].
- Our findings for ELs and EC students indicate that the PD and lesson plans were successful for promoting literacy-infused science via a 5E model that includes three to five of the Es used daily as opposed to using such practices with one to two Es per day, as is usually practiced. Big ideas were able to be conveyed and assessed through the project curriculum, literacy-infused science with the components depicted as a summary of our project in Figure 3: (a) national standards; (b) state standards; (c) DCIs; (d) 5E Model and hands-on activities; and (e) ESL and content reading strategies.
- The instructional intervention included the engagement of ELs and EC students in science as practice. We placed an emphasis on the cognitively-demanding task of considering content in context; such emphasis helped treatment students to demonstrate a higher level of understanding of big ideas over those control students who did not participate in the intervention.
12. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Sample BISA Items
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Standard Type | Big Idea and Related National Standards and State Standards |
---|---|
Big Idea: The total amount of energy in the Universe is always the same but can be transferred from one energy store to another during an event. | |
NGSS standards | Samples of disciplinary core ideas from NGSS [51]: PS3.B: Conservation of Energy and Energy Transfer (p. 124)
|
State science standards | Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills, Science, Grade 6 [52] 6.9 Force, motion, and energy. The student knows that the Law of Conservation of Energy states that energy can neither be created, nor destroyed, it just changes form. (p. 7)
|
Big Idea | Assessment Item Number | Next Generation Science Standards | |
---|---|---|---|
Crosscutting Concepts | Disciplinary Core Ideas | ||
The diversity of organisms, living and extinct, is the result of evolution. | 28, 29 | Structure and Function | LS1: From molecules to organisms: Structures and processes |
1 | Structure and Function | LS4: Biological Evolution: Unity and Diversity | |
The total amount of energy in the Universe is always the same but can be transferred from one energy store to another during an event. | 12 | Energy and Matter: Flows, cycles, and conservation | PS1: Matter and its interactions PS3: Energy |
2, 8, 15, 16, 20, 21, 22, 23 | Energy and Matter: Flows, cycles, and conservation | PS3: Energy | |
All matter in the Universe is made of very small particles. | 3 | Cause and effect: Mechanism and explanation | ESS3: Earth and human activity |
11 | Cause and effect: Mechanism and explanation | PS1: Matter and its interactions | |
9, 10, 13, 14 | Structure and Function | PS1: Matter and its interactions | |
The composition of the Earth and its atmosphere and the processes occurring within them shape the Earth’s surface and its climate. | 4 | Patterns | ESS2: Earth’s systems |
5 | Energy and Matter: Flows, cycles, and conservation | ESS2: Earth’s systems | |
24, 25, 26, 27 | Structure and Function | ESS2: Earth’s systems | |
Organisms require a supply of energy and materials for which they often depend on, or compete with, other organisms. | 6 | Cause and effect: Mechanism and explanation | LS2: Ecosystems: Interactions, energy, and dynamics |
Changing the movement of an object requires a net force to be acting on it. | 7 | Cause and effect: Mechanism and explanation | PS2: Motion and stability: Forces and interactions |
17, 18, 19 | Scale, Proportion, and Quantity | PS2: Motion and stability | |
Organisms are organized on a cellular basis and have a finite life span. | 30 | Structure and Function | LS1: From molecules to organisms: Structures and processes |
Benchmark 1 | Benchmark 2 | Benchmark 3 | Benchmark 4 | Benchmark 5 | Benchmark 6 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
EL | ||||||
Pre-test | 0.407 ** | 0.274 ** | 0.254 * | 0.226 * | 0.306 ** | 0.295 ** |
Post-test | 0.547 ** | 0.465 ** | 0.485 ** | 0.280 ** | 0.627 ** | 0.754 ** |
Non-EL, EC | ||||||
Pre-test | 0.442 ** | 0.250 ** | 0.308 ** | 0.378 ** | 0.425 ** | 0.261 ** |
Post-test | 0.438 ** | 0.389 ** | 0.231 * | 0.494 ** | 0.384 ** | 0.591 ** |
Oral Vocabulary | Verbal Analogies | Passage Comprehension | |
---|---|---|---|
EL | |||
Pre-test | 0.301 ** | 0.346 ** | 0.323 ** |
Post-test | 0.260 * | 0.314 ** | 0.303 ** |
Non-EL, EC | |||
Pre-test | 0.309 ** | 0.370 ** | 0.312 ** |
Post-test | 0.208 * | 0.372 ** | 0.316 ** |
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Lara-Alecio, R.; Irby, B.J.; Tong, F.; Guerrero, C.; Koch, J.; Sutton-Jones, K.L. Assessing Conceptual Understanding via Literacy-Infused, Inquiry-Based Science among Middle School English Learners and Economically-Challenged Students. Educ. Sci. 2018, 8, 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8010027
Lara-Alecio R, Irby BJ, Tong F, Guerrero C, Koch J, Sutton-Jones KL. Assessing Conceptual Understanding via Literacy-Infused, Inquiry-Based Science among Middle School English Learners and Economically-Challenged Students. Education Sciences. 2018; 8(1):27. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8010027
Chicago/Turabian StyleLara-Alecio, Rafael, Beverly J. Irby, Fuhui Tong, Cindy Guerrero, Janice Koch, and Kara L. Sutton-Jones. 2018. "Assessing Conceptual Understanding via Literacy-Infused, Inquiry-Based Science among Middle School English Learners and Economically-Challenged Students" Education Sciences 8, no. 1: 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8010027
APA StyleLara-Alecio, R., Irby, B. J., Tong, F., Guerrero, C., Koch, J., & Sutton-Jones, K. L. (2018). Assessing Conceptual Understanding via Literacy-Infused, Inquiry-Based Science among Middle School English Learners and Economically-Challenged Students. Education Sciences, 8(1), 27. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci8010027