Examining Learning Cycle
Examining Learning Cycle
References
Abell, S.K., and M.J. Volkmann. 2006. Seamless assessment in science: A guide for elementary and middle school teachers. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Abraham, M.R., and J.W. Renner. 1986. The sequence of learning cycle activities in high school chemistry. Journal of Research in Science Teaching 23(2): 121 143. Beeth, M.E., and P.W. Hewson. 1999. Learning goals in exemplary science teachers practice: Cognitive and social factors in teaching for conceptual change. Science Education 83(6): 738 760. Bransford, J., A. Brown, and R. Cocking. 2001. How people learn: Brain, mind, experience, and school. Washington, DC: National Academy Press. Bruner, J. 1960. The process of education. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press. Bybee, R.W. 1997. Achieving scientific literacy: From purposes to practices. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann. Cavallo, A. 2001. Convection connections. Science and Children 38(8): 20 25. Cavallo, A. 2005. Cycling through plants. Science and Children 42(7): 22 27. Gerber, B.L., A.M.L. Cavallo, and E.A. Marek. 2001. Relationship among informal learning environments, teaching procedures, and scientific reasoning abilities. International Journal of Science Education 23(5): 535 549. Karplus, R., and H.D. Thier. 1967. A new look at elementary school science. Chicago: Rand McNally. Magnusson, S.J., and A.S. Palinscar. 2005. Teaching to promote the development of scientific knowledge and reasoning about light at the elementary school level. In How students learn: Science in the classroom, eds. M.S. Donovan and J.D. Bransford, 421 474. Washington, DC: National Academies Press. McNall, R.L., and R.L. Bell. 2004. Discovering flowers in a new light. Science and Children 41(4): 36 39. Nuthall, G. 1999. The way students learn: Acquiring knowledge from an integrated science and social studies unit. The Elementary School Journal 99(4): 303 341. Renner, J.W., M.R. Abraham, and H.H. Birnie. 1988. The necessity of each phase of the learning cycle in teaching high school physics. Journal of Research in Science Teaching 25(1): 39 58. Roth, K.J. 1989. Science education: Its not enough to do or relate. American Educator 13(4): 46 48.
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Abraham, and Birnie (1988) found greater achievement and retention when concepts were introduced after experiences. Gerber, Cavallo, and Marek (2001) found that students taught via a learning cycle scored higher on a test of scientific reasoning. Beeth and Hewson (1999) studied one teachers science instruction in grades 46. She alternated hands-on activities with goal-directed discussion; her students improved their science understanding as well as their engagement in scientific discourse. Thus, a learning cycle approach helps students make sense of scientific ideas, improve their scientific reasoning, and increase their engagement in science class.