Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum Posts

Students today are increasingly engaged in the use of digital information and communication technologies. The Internet continues to grow and more and more young people are using it worldwide. Educational practices, however, have been slow to adapt to the corresponding developments. For example, Inte...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Johanna Dittmar, Ingo Eilks
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-05-01
Series:Education Sciences
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/9/2/121
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spelling doaj-1f71374126d54d14b95fb817bb8e635c2020-11-24T20:57:58ZengMDPI AGEducation Sciences2227-71022019-05-019212110.3390/educsci9020121educsci9020121Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum PostsJohanna Dittmar0Ingo Eilks1Department of Biology and Chemistry—Institute for Science Education, University of Bremen, Leobener Str. NW2, 28359 Bremen, GermanyDepartment of Biology and Chemistry—Institute for Science Education, University of Bremen, Leobener Str. NW2, 28359 Bremen, GermanyStudents today are increasingly engaged in the use of digital information and communication technologies. The Internet continues to grow and more and more young people are using it worldwide. Educational practices, however, have been slow to adapt to the corresponding developments. For example, Internet forums are generally ignored in most educational practices, including chemistry education, although they are often used to find new information by everyday people. The question therefore arises: Why are such media not used to provoke and promote science or chemistry teaching and learning, while simultaneously developing critical scientific media literacy? To understand how the younger generation learns via Internet forums, this article looks at a survey of Internet forum usage behavior by lower and upper secondary school students (age range 12−17) in relation to chemistry-specific content. The findings are then contrasted with an analysis of user behavior. The final analysis revealed that students are open and critical when using Internet forums, even though such learning is mostly unconnected to formal education. These results can inform science and chemistry teaching by focusing teaching and learning more on Internet forums in order to employ them as an educational medium in science class.https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/9/2/121science educationchemistry educationinterestdigital mediaInternet forums
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Johanna Dittmar
Ingo Eilks
spellingShingle Johanna Dittmar
Ingo Eilks
Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum Posts
Education Sciences
science education
chemistry education
interest
digital media
Internet forums
author_facet Johanna Dittmar
Ingo Eilks
author_sort Johanna Dittmar
title Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum Posts
title_short Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum Posts
title_full Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum Posts
title_fullStr Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum Posts
title_full_unstemmed Secondary School Students and Internet Forums—A Survey of Student Views Contrasted with an Analysis of Internet Forum Posts
title_sort secondary school students and internet forums—a survey of student views contrasted with an analysis of internet forum posts
publisher MDPI AG
series Education Sciences
issn 2227-7102
publishDate 2019-05-01
description Students today are increasingly engaged in the use of digital information and communication technologies. The Internet continues to grow and more and more young people are using it worldwide. Educational practices, however, have been slow to adapt to the corresponding developments. For example, Internet forums are generally ignored in most educational practices, including chemistry education, although they are often used to find new information by everyday people. The question therefore arises: Why are such media not used to provoke and promote science or chemistry teaching and learning, while simultaneously developing critical scientific media literacy? To understand how the younger generation learns via Internet forums, this article looks at a survey of Internet forum usage behavior by lower and upper secondary school students (age range 12−17) in relation to chemistry-specific content. The findings are then contrasted with an analysis of user behavior. The final analysis revealed that students are open and critical when using Internet forums, even though such learning is mostly unconnected to formal education. These results can inform science and chemistry teaching by focusing teaching and learning more on Internet forums in order to employ them as an educational medium in science class.
topic science education
chemistry education
interest
digital media
Internet forums
url https://www.mdpi.com/2227-7102/9/2/121
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