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How does grasping the underlying causal structures of ecosystems impact students' understanding?
184
Citations
25
References
2003
Year
Ecosystems Impact StudentsEngineeringEcology (Indigenous Studies)Abstract StudentsLearning SciencesUnderlying CausalityEcosystem EngineerCausal StructuresEcosystem ConceptsEcology (Ecological Sciences)Social-ecological SystemEcosystem ImpactEcosystem ManagementSystem Ecology
Abstract Students have difficulty understanding ecosystem concepts. This article argues that the difficulty stems partly from not grasping the underlying causality that structures the concepts. We report on an intervention study designed to teach eight- and nine-year-olds to reason about domino, cyclic, and mutual causality by infusing causally focused activities and explicit discussion about the nature of each type of causality into a teachertaught unit on ecosystems. The teacher-taught unit was typical of ecosystems units taught in many elementary schools. The students were third graders from a suburban middle class community and ranged from low to high achieving students. Three conditions were contrasted: 1) activities with discussion; 2) activities only; and 3) no infused activities. Students who participated in both the activities designed to reveal the underlying causal structure and the discussion of the nature of causality showed significantly deeper understanding of the connectedness within ecosystems and demonstrated a significantly better grasp of the process of decomposition and the mechanisms that cause it. The results suggest that it is important to teach students how to structure ecosystems concepts in addition to teaching ecosystems information. Keywords: EcosystemsCausalityDeep understanding
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