Abstract
Mechanistic reasoning, or reasoning systematically through underlying factors and relationships that give rise to phenomena, is a powerful thinking strategy that allows one to explain and make predictions about phenomena. This article synthesizes and builds on existing frameworks to identify essential characteristics of students’ mechanistic reasoning across scientific content areas. We argue that these characteristics can be represented as epistemic heuristics, or ideas about how to direct one’s intellectual work, that implicitly guide mechanistic reasoning. We use this framework to characterize middle school students’ written explanatory accounts of two phenomena in different science content areas using these heuristics. We demonstrate evidence of heuristics in students’ accounts and show that the use of the heuristics was related to but distinct from science content knowledge. We describe how the heuristics allowed us to characterize and compare the mechanistic sophistication of account construction across science content areas. This framework captures elements of a crosscutting practical epistemology that may support students in directing the construction of mechanistic accounts across content areas over time, and it allows us to characterize that progress.
Acknowledgments
This article comes out of the research of the Scientific Practices group at Northwestern University, Michigan State University, University of Wisconsin–Madison, and Wright State University. We are indebted to the nonauthoring members of this group (Leema Berland, Lisa Kenyon, Abraham Lo, Li Ke, May Lee, Joshua Rosenberg, and Jeanette Meager) for their partnership and ongoing conversations that shaped this article and to Keith Esch and Sean Smith for their fruitful feedback and evaluation relevant to the ideas and data presented here. Many thanks to Kelsey Edwards and Dan Voss for their contributions in developing the coding rubrics and to Matt Yan, Gloria Llenos, Lauren Dennis, Caroline Sir, and Kai Kasprick for their efforts in processing and coding the student assessment data. We are grateful to the participating teachers who administered our assessments and to the participating students for sharing their science thinking with us. We also appreciate feedback about this framework from Dr. Jon Stoltzfus, Dr. Melanie Cooper, and her research group. This article was greatly improved by comments from reviewer Rosemary Russ and two additional anonymous reviewers and from editors Douglas Clark and Susan Yoon.
Notes
1 These data were collected across 5 years as part of studies examining students’ participation in science practices (Baek et al., Citation2011; Berland et al., Citation2016; Krist, Citation2016). The lesson during which this discussion took place was the first lesson of the sixth-grade Investigating and Questioning our World through Science and Technology Introduction to Chemistry unit (“How Can I Smell Things From a Distance?”; Krajcik et al., Citation2008, Citation2013).
2 We acknowledge that Wilensky and colleagues’ work and Hmelo-Silver and colleagues’ work come from very different theoretical traditions with respect to complex systems thinking (Yoon, Citation2018). We are focusing on these specific perspectives because they have been instrumental in supporting our thinking about mechanistic reasoning.
3 We were less concerned with content validity with respect to mechanistic reasoning because we drew on these literatures heavily in developing our framework, which contains components from multiple existing frameworks. Therefore, it did not make sense to do comparative coding.
4 We include some life sciences here, including biochemistry and molecular biology, because their mechanistic explanations draw on entities at similar scalar levels as do much of the physical sciences (Machamer et al., Citation2000; van Mil et al., Citation2013).
5 Here we chose to interpret the idea of more food as an indication that gray squirrels have more food options available, not a greater quantity of food as a result of a decreased amount available to red squirrels as a result of competition.
6 In upper elementary and middle school, students typically begin with an understanding of temperature as that of a property of a substance: It is a number on a thermometer rather than an emergent property of the amount of kinetic energy of a substance’s particles. Students also begin by thinking of pressure as a push, more akin to an intuitive understanding of a force, rather than something measurable and related to particle interactions.