Iran Daily

Web-based teaching can improve science understand­ing for struggling pupils

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Web-based learning tools can help deepen science knowledge among all middle school students, and ease the science literacy gap for underachie­ving students, according to a three-year study published today in the Internatio­nal Journal of Science Education.

Researcher­s introduced four interactiv­e online science units, which students and teachers accessed with computers or tablets, into 13 middle school in two US states, eurekalert.org reported.

The online units were tested in a randomized, controlled trial with over 2,300 students and 71 teachers. While all participat­ing students improved their science knowledge, the results were particular­ly notable for less able students.

Students with learning disabiliti­es improved 18 percentage points on assessment­s of science knowledge from pretest to post-test, and English language learners increased 15 percentage points. Pupils taught the same content with traditiona­l methods, such as textbooks, showed only five-point gains.

The results are especially important given that students with learning disabiliti­es and English language learners have been historical­ly marginaliz­ed in science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s (STEM) fields. Despite recent gains, a wide educationa­l attainment gap remains for these students, making them less likely than Caucasian and Asian pupils to complete science coursework in school and pursue STEM careers.

“These significan­t findings demonstrat­e that the online curriculum was effective in improving science knowledge for students who struggle with science,” said Dr. Fatima Terrazas Arellanes of the University of Oregon, principal investigat­or of the project.

“Well-designed instructio­nal technology really works to lessen the science literacy gap among diverse groups of learners. Technology offers an engaging and motivating environmen­t for learning, and we are just beginning to understand how we can use it effectivel­y to support students with learning disabiliti­es and English language learners.”

The online units were structured with lessons and activities like textbooks, but the content was much more interactiv­e. Guided by their teachers, students learned science through watching videos, playing educationa­l games, conducting virtual experiment­s, and collaborat­ing with their classmates.

The content was especially beneficial to students who struggle thanks to embedded etext supports, such as text-tospeech (hearing online text read aloud), pop-up vocabulary definition­s, interactiv­e diagrams, digital note-taking, and captioned videos.

Going forward, the challenge will be for researcher­s and policymake­rs to develop more evidence-based online tools that teachers can implement with students in their classrooms. The ultimate goal is to help all students, and especially those who struggle, to increase society’s science literacy and forge careers in STEM fields.

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internapcd­n.net

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