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      Understanding Clicker Discussions: Student Reasoning and the Impact of Instructional Cues

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          Abstract

          This paper characterizes in-class discussion of clicker questions among upper-level biology majors, demonstrating that students exchanged ideas in 75% of the recorded clicker discussions, using high-quality reasoning almost 50% of the time. In addition, when cued by the instructor to use reasoning, they engaged in higher-quality discussions.

          Abstract

          Previous research has shown that undergraduate science students learn from peer discussions of in-class clicker questions. However, the features that characterize such discussions are largely unknown, as are the instructional factors that may lead students into productive discussions. To explore these questions, we recorded and transcribed 83 discussions among groups of students discussing 34 different clicker questions in an upper-level developmental biology class. Discussion transcripts were analyzed for features such as making claims, questioning, and explaining reasoning. In addition, transcripts were categorized by the quality of reasoning students used and for performance features, such as percent correct on initial vote, percent correct on revote, and normalized learning change. We found that the majority of student discussions included exchanges of reasoning that used evidence and that many such exchanges resulted in students achieving the correct answer. Students also had discussions in which ideas were exchanged, but the correct answer not achieved. Importantly, instructor prompts that asked students to use reasoning resulted in significantly more discussions containing reasoning connected to evidence than without such prompts. Overall, these results suggest that these upper-level biology students readily employ reasoning in their discussions and are positively influenced by instructor cues.

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          The skills of argument

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            Enhancing the quality of argumentation in school science

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              Biology in bloom: implementing Bloom's Taxonomy to enhance student learning in biology.

              We developed the Blooming Biology Tool (BBT), an assessment tool based on Bloom's Taxonomy, to assist science faculty in better aligning their assessments with their teaching activities and to help students enhance their study skills and metacognition. The work presented here shows how assessment tools, such as the BBT, can be used to guide and enhance teaching and student learning in a discipline-specific manner in postsecondary education. The BBT was first designed and extensively tested for a study in which we ranked almost 600 science questions from college life science exams and standardized tests. The BBT was then implemented in three different collegiate settings. Implementation of the BBT helped us to adjust our teaching to better enhance our students' current mastery of the material, design questions at higher cognitive skills levels, and assist students in studying for college-level exams and in writing study questions at higher levels of Bloom's Taxonomy. From this work we also created a suite of complementary tools that can assist biology faculty in creating classroom materials and exams at the appropriate level of Bloom's Taxonomy and students to successfully develop and answer questions that require higher-order cognitive skills.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Monitoring Editor
                Journal
                CBE Life Sci Educ
                CBE-LSE
                CBE-LSE
                CBE-LSE
                CBE Life Sciences Education
                American Society for Cell Biology
                1931-7913
                1931-7913
                Winter 2013
                : 12
                : 4
                : 645-654
                Affiliations
                [1]*Department of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309
                [2] Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado Boulder, Boulder, CO 80309
                [3] Department of Molecular and Cellular Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, AZ 85721
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to: Jennifer K. Knight ( knight@ 123456colorado.edu ).
                Article
                CBE-13-05-0090
                10.1187/cbe.13-05-0090
                3846515
                24297291
                fc782357-a015-444a-b120-cfb194b9bf77
                © 2013 J. K. Knight et al. CBE—Life Sciences Education © 2013 The American Society for Cell Biology. This article is distributed by The American Society for Cell Biology under license from the author(s). It is available to the public under an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 3.0 Unported Creative Commons License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0).

                “ASCB®” and “The American Society for Cell Biology®” are registered trademarks of The American Society of Cell Biology.

                History
                : 6 May 2013
                : 11 June 2013
                : 2 July 2013
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                December 2, 2013

                Education
                Education

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