Publication | Closed Access
Development of Scientific Reasoning in College Biology: Do Two Levels of General Hypothesis-Testing Skills Exist?
157
Citations
41
References
2000
Year
Inquiry-based LearningScience EducationEducational PsychologyEducationScientific ReasoningCollege BiologyPsychologySocial SciencesHypothesis-testing SkillsStem EducationQuantitative PsychologyLearning PsychologyCognitive DevelopmentSkilled PerformancePsychological EvaluationCognitive ScienceScientific LiteracyStatistical ThinkingTest DevelopmentEducational TestingValidity TheoryHypothesis-testing SkillEducational MeasurementExperimental PsychologyHypothesis-testing Skills TestReasoningEducational Assessment
The primary purpose of the present study was to test the hypothesis that two general developmentally based levels of hypothesis-testing skills exist. The first hypothesized level presumably involves skills associated with testing hypotheses about observable causal agents; the second presumably involves skills associated with testing hypotheses involving unobservable entities. To test this hypothesis, a hypothesis-testing skills test was developed and administered to a large sample of college students both at the start and at the end of a biology course in which several hypotheses at each level were generated and tested. The predicted positive relationship between level of hypothesis-testing skill and performance on a transfer problem involving the test of a hypothesis involving unobservable entities was found. The predicted positive relationship between level of hypothesis-testing skill and course performance was also found. Both theoretical and practical implications of the findings are discussed. © 2000 John Wiley & Sons, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 37: 81–101, 2000
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1