ABSTRACT
Empirical analysis of secondary biology classrooms revealed that, on average, 68% of teaching time in Germany revolved around processing tasks. Quality of instruction can thus be assessed by analyzing the quality of tasks used in classroom discourse. This quasi-experimental study analyzed how teachers used tasks in 38 videotaped biology lessons pertaining to the topic ‘blood and circulatory system’. Two fundamental characteristics used to analyze tasks include: (1) required cognitive level of processing (e.g. low level information processing: repetiition, summary, define, classify and high level information processing: interpret-analyze data, formulate hypothesis, etc.) and (2) complexity of task content (e.g. if tasks require use of factual, linking or concept level content). Additionally, students’ cognitive knowledge structure about the topic ‘blood and circulatory system’ was measured using student-drawn concept maps (N = 970 students). Finally, linear multilevel models were created with high-level cognitive processing tasks and higher content complexity tasks as class-level predictors and students’ prior knowledge, students’ interest in biology, and students’ interest in biology activities as control covariates. Results showed a positive influence of high-level cognitive processing tasks (β = 0.07; p < .01) on students’ cognitive knowledge structure. However, there was no observed effect of higher content complexity tasks on students’ cognitive knowledge structure. Presented findings encourage the use of high-level cognitive processing tasks in biology instruction.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes on contributors
Ms. Jigna Nawani is a doctoral candidate at the Biology Education Group, Department I, Faculty of Biology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. She received her Masters in Environment Sciences from Gujarat University. Her current research interests include investigating the effectiveness of teaching practices used in biology classrooms.
Ms. Julia Rixius was a doctoral student at the at the Biology Education Group, Department I, Faculty of Biology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. Currently, she is working as a biology teacher.
Prof. Dr. Birgit J. Neuhaus is chair of the Biology Education Group, Department I, Faculty of Biology, Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität München. Her research interests include investigating biology teachers' professional knowledge as well as the effectiveness of teaching practices used in German biology classrooms.