The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific Argumentation

The purpose of this study was to investigate the types of argumentation discourse displayed by students when they engaged in chat as part of an online multiplayer game about both socioscientific and scientific topics. Specifically, this study analyzed discourse episodes created by middle school stud...

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Main Authors: Jana Craig-Hare, Marilyn Ault, Amber Rowland
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Seyit Ahmet Kıray 2017-07-01
Series:Journal of Education in Science, Environment and Health
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jeseh.net/index.php/jeseh/article/view/96
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spelling doaj-b9f7286525fd444d886245efa3b90d032020-11-25T03:32:40ZengSeyit Ahmet KırayJournal of Education in Science, Environment and Health2149-214X2017-07-013211012538The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific ArgumentationJana Craig-Hare0Marilyn Ault1Amber Rowland2University of Kansas Center for Research on LearningUniversity of Kansas Center for Research on LearningUniversity of Kansas Center for Research on LearningThe purpose of this study was to investigate the types of argumentation discourse displayed by students when they engaged in chat as part of an online multiplayer game about both socioscientific and scientific topics. Specifically, this study analyzed discourse episodes created by middle school students as they discussed scientific and socioscientific topics within an online, multiplayer game. Using a Discourse Analysis Scoring Guide, student discussions were coded based on the type of interaction or statements made. Analysis included a comparison between the types of topics (scientific vs. socioscientific) and the student author’s justification for their decision to accept, reject or withhold judgement about the claim; teammate comments related to the author’s justification; an overall rating of the discourse episode interaction; and frequency of argumentation vocabulary use throughout the discourse episode. Results indicated that socioscientific topics produced collaborative discourse episodes that were positive, supportive, and civil within an argumentation framework.https://jeseh.net/index.php/jeseh/article/view/96scientific argumentationdiscoursegame-based learningmiddle school sciencesocioscientific issues
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jana Craig-Hare
Marilyn Ault
Amber Rowland
spellingShingle Jana Craig-Hare
Marilyn Ault
Amber Rowland
The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific Argumentation
Journal of Education in Science, Environment and Health
scientific argumentation
discourse
game-based learning
middle school science
socioscientific issues
author_facet Jana Craig-Hare
Marilyn Ault
Amber Rowland
author_sort Jana Craig-Hare
title The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific Argumentation
title_short The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific Argumentation
title_full The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific Argumentation
title_fullStr The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific Argumentation
title_full_unstemmed The Effect of Socioscientific Topics on Discourse within an Online Game Designed to Engage Middle School Students in Scientific Argumentation
title_sort effect of socioscientific topics on discourse within an online game designed to engage middle school students in scientific argumentation
publisher Seyit Ahmet Kıray
series Journal of Education in Science, Environment and Health
issn 2149-214X
publishDate 2017-07-01
description The purpose of this study was to investigate the types of argumentation discourse displayed by students when they engaged in chat as part of an online multiplayer game about both socioscientific and scientific topics. Specifically, this study analyzed discourse episodes created by middle school students as they discussed scientific and socioscientific topics within an online, multiplayer game. Using a Discourse Analysis Scoring Guide, student discussions were coded based on the type of interaction or statements made. Analysis included a comparison between the types of topics (scientific vs. socioscientific) and the student author’s justification for their decision to accept, reject or withhold judgement about the claim; teammate comments related to the author’s justification; an overall rating of the discourse episode interaction; and frequency of argumentation vocabulary use throughout the discourse episode. Results indicated that socioscientific topics produced collaborative discourse episodes that were positive, supportive, and civil within an argumentation framework.
topic scientific argumentation
discourse
game-based learning
middle school science
socioscientific issues
url https://jeseh.net/index.php/jeseh/article/view/96
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