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RESEARCH REPORT

Taiwanese Students’ Alternative Conceptions of Animal Biodiversity

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Pages 535-553 | Published online: 27 Mar 2007
 

Abstract

This study explored and documented Taiwanese students’ alternative conceptions of animal classification. We examined the understanding of the animal, vertebrate and invertebrate, fish, amphibian, reptile, bird, and mammal concepts among elementary, junior high school and senior high school, and university students in a sample population of close to 2,000 students. Using clinical interviews, sorting tasks, and a two‐tiered diagnostic instrument, we documented the frequencies of a wide range of ideas and compared our findings with those of studies in the United Kingdom, New Zealand, and the United States. The most important results indicate that for most students, the concept label animal refers to vertebrates, especially to common, well‐known mammals and birds; the most common attributes used by students to define animals are movement and viability; many students had difficulty in making the distinction between vertebrates and invertebrates, and between reptiles and amphibians; and students tended to use external morphology, habitat, and movement in distinguishing between common, well‐known vertebrates and invertebrates, and certain vertebrate animals pose special conceptual problems for students by virtue of their external morphology and habitat (e.g., the penguin and octopus). We contend that insights gained from this study will provide useful suggestions for Taiwanese science curriculum designers, science teachers, and researchers involved in the new 9‐year curriculum reform.

Acknowledgement

This project was embedded in a larger grant funded by the National Science Council awarded to C.‐F.Yen (grant number NSC91‐2522‐S‐126‐001).

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