Do student perceptions of teaching predict the development ofrepresentational competence and biological knowledge?

Sandra Nitz, Shaaron E. Ainsworth, Claudia Nerdel, Helmut Prechtl

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

47 Scopus citations

Abstract

Dealing with representations is a crucial skill for students and such representational competence is essential for learning science. This study analysed the relationship between representational competence and content knowledge, student perceptions of teaching practices concerning the use of different representations, and their impact on students' outcome over a teaching unit. Participants were 931 students in 51 secondary school classes. Representational competence and content knowledge were interactively related. Representational aspects were only moderately included in teaching and students did not develop rich representational competence although content knowledge increased significantly. Multilevel regression showed that student perceptions of interpreting and constructing visual-graphical representations and active social construction of knowledge predicted students' outcome at class level, whereas the individually perceived amount of terms and use of symbolic representations influenced the students' achievement at individual level. Methodological and practical implications of these findings are discussed in relation to the development of representational competence in classrooms.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)13-22
Number of pages10
JournalLearning and Instruction
Volume31
DOIs
StatePublished - Jun 2014

Keywords

  • Assessment
  • Instructional quality
  • Representational competence
  • Students' perceptions of teaching practices

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