Abstract
We report on a study investigating the relationship between cognitive ability grouping, reflective inquiry scaffolding, and students’ collaborative explanations of an ecosystem disturbance which took place when a number of flamingo birds died in a salt lake because of nearby intensive human activities. Twenty-six pairs of students from two intact sixth-grade classes participated in the study. All students investigated scientific data relating to the ecosystem problem using a web-based learning environment. One class was provided with web-based reflective inquiry scaffolding (WorkSpace), while the other class used PowerPoint. The main data analyzed for this study consisted of each pair’s written explanation and task-related artifacts. Findings show that the web-based reflective scaffolding supported students in providing valid evidence in support of their explanations. The analyses of the students’ collaborative explanations showed no statistically significant differences that could be attributed to prior achievement between students in the WorkSpace condition, while differences were found between the different cognitive ability pairs in the PowerPoint class. These findings suggest that the WorkSpace scaffolding may have provided more influential support to lower cognitive ability pairs in creating evidence-based explanations.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank Georgia Michael for her support during the implementation of the STOCHASMOS project. We also thank Maria Loi, Andreani Baytelman, Rodothea Hadjilouca, and Myroula Hadjichristoforou for their contribution to the study. This work was funded by the Cyprus Research Promotion Foundation (STOCHASMOS, KINHT/0504/03), and a European Commission FP6 Marie Curie International Re-integration Grant (Reflective Inquiry, 017515). Opinions, findings, and conclusions are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of the funding agencies. For more information about the STOCHASMOS project, please visit http://www.stochasmos.org and http://www.coreflect.org.
Notes
All students worked in pairs, with one exception in which students worked in a triad, due to the total number of students in the class. For brevity, we will use the word ‘pairs’ for all student groups.