Daily Nation Newspaper

WEB-BASED TEACHING MAY IMPROVE SCIENCE UNDERSTAND­ING OF PUPILS

- -GADGETSNOW

WEB-BASED learning tools can help deepen science knowledge among struggling pupils, and ease the science literacy gap for underachie­ving students, according to a study published today.

Researcher­s at University of Oregon in the US introduced four interactiv­e online science units, which students and teachers accessed with computers or tablets, into 13 middle schools in two US states.

The online units were tested in a randomised, 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 pre-test to post-test, and English language learners increased 15 percentage points.

Pupils taught the same content with traditiona­l methods, such as textbooks, showed only 5-point gains.

The results published in the Internatio­nal Journal of Science Education are especially important given that students with learning disabiliti­es and English language learners have been historical­ly marginalis­ed in science, technology, engineerin­g, and mathematic­s (STEM) fields, researcher­s said.

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, they said.

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

The online units were structured with lessons and activities like textbooks, but the content was much more interactiv­e.

Guided by their teachers, students learnt 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-to-speech (hearing online text read aloud), pop-up vocabulary definition­s, interactiv­e diagrams, digital note-taking, and captioned videos.

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