Learning Content Through Own Inquiry
Learning Content Through Own Inquiry
Bill Robertson
From developing curriculum and working with teachers around the United States, I know this
viewpoint is incorrect. To get a sense of how inquiry and content are frequently cast as mutually
exclusive, imagine yourself as a teacher in the following pair of scenarios.
You've been implementing this inquiry-based curriculum for a while, and you're troubled. The
kids have a great time doing hands-on science, but they don't seem to be discovering the
science concepts that you had hoped they would. In addition, the parents are less than thrilled
that their children aren't learning traditional science. The district curriculum committee shares
your concerns, citing research on the ineffectiveness of unguided inquiry (Mayer, 2004), and
your state's science assessments are coming up fast. Given this scary situation, your district
pulls an about-face. They declare that it's time to deemphasize hands-on, inquiry science and to
adopt a content-driven approach so students will learn the basics.
As a preview of what kind of teaching you might expect to see in your school after this shift,
consider scenario 2.
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Now imagine you're back to being that 4th grade teacher who is switching to a content-driven
curriculum. Does this switch mean that you have to start teaching “traditionally,” as described in
scenario 2?
Conventional wisdom would answer yes, but the purely traditional approach is not your only
option. You can use hands-on activities in a meaningful way to help students build a
fundamental understanding of science concepts using a model known as the Learning Cycle
(Atkin & Karplus, 1962).
In the Engagement phase, teachers expose students to questions and activities that engage
their prior knowledge of the domain in question; in the Evaluation stage, they assess students.
I'll concentrate on the middle three Es here, because they show the heart of the Learning Cycle.
In the Exploration phase, students perform hands-on activities designed to “set them up” for
understanding a concept. Instead of explaining the concept beforehand, the teacher structures
experiences from which students can draw an understanding of the concept.
For example, suppose you want to teach students the law of reflection: The light reflected off a
surface leaves the surface at the same angle that the light hits the surface. In the Exploration
phase, you might have the students investigate how different beams of light reflect off surfaces
by asking them to measure certain angles and look for a pattern in those angles. You would not
give students flashlights and mirrors, tell them to mess around a bit, and hope they'll discover
the relationship. That's the kind of procedure that has given hands-on science a bad name.
In the Explanation phase, teachers draw on the explorative activities just completed to explain
the new concept. In our light example, you would explain that the angle of incidence of a light
ray is equal to the angle of reflection of the light ray. If you've structured your Exploration
activity well, students will be able to apply labels (such as angle of incidence) to the
phenomenon that they have already observed.
Activities in the Elaboration phase involve leading students to apply their learning in a new—and
often hands-on—situation that reinforces and initially assesses their learning. In an Elaboration
lesson connected to the light example, a teacher might show students an arrangement of
mirrors, give them a protractor, and tell them to predict where a light ray would ultimately end
up if that ray were bounced off the mirror arrangement. It's crucial that the activity present a
new situation that relies on concepts previously encountered. Thus students don't rely on
memorization to accomplish the task.
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how effectively teaching high school physics using the Learning Cycle helped students learn
science content. They also examined whether the order in which the Learning Cycle phases were
presented had any influence. Switching the order of the phases can actually result in the two
different instruction scenarios I've contrasted here. For example, presenting the Explanation
phase before the other two phases approximates the lecture/labs format (scenario 2).
Presenting the Exploration phase first and the Elaboration phase second without including an
Explanation lesson leads to unguided hands-on instruction in which teachers hope students
stumble upon key science concepts (scenario 1).
Renner's investigations showed that the normal sequence of the Learning Cycle—Exploration,
Explanation, Elaboration—is the most effective method for all learners tackling new subject
matter. Presenting the Explanation phase first—which is similar to starting out with a lecture
format—did help many students grasp review content well. But even with review material,
students who were at a concrete, rather than formal, level of reasoning (Piaget, 1970) learned
most effectively through the normal sequence of the Learning Cycle.
Other researchers have found that a teacher's clear understanding of the concepts to be learned
and of how they will tie into the Exploration activities of the Learning Cycle is essential to the
mix. A recent NSTA Reports article (National Science Teachers Association, 2003) revealed that
one of the primary predictors of a science teacher's success is that teacher's content knowledge.
References
Atkin, J. M., & Karplus, R. (1962). Discovery or invention? The Science Teacher,
29(5), 45–51.
Biological Sciences Curriculum Study. (1988). Science for Life and Living. Dubuque,
IA: Kendall/Hunt.
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Piaget, J. (1970). Structuralism (C. Maschler, Trans.). New York: Harper and Row.
Renner, J. W., Abraham, M. R., & Birnie, H. H. (1988). The necessity of each phase of
the learning cycle in teaching high school physics. Journal of Research in Science
Teaching, 25(1), 39–58.
Bill Robertson is the author of the National Science Teachers Association's book series Stop Faking It! Finally
Understanding Science So You Can Teach It; [email protected].
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