Advancing Science Learning through Design-Based Learning

A special issue of Education Sciences (ISSN 2227-7102). This special issue belongs to the section "STEM Education".

Deadline for manuscript submissions: 15 December 2024 | Viewed by 992

Special Issue Editor


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Guest Editor
Department of STEM Education, Northern Arizona University, Flagstaff, AZ, USA
Interests: science education; design-based research; collaborative design; community-engaged research; project-based learning; sociocultural theory; cognitive science

Special Issue Information

Dear Colleagues, 

Education Sciences is pleased to announce a Special Issue on design-based learning (DBL) approaches in science education. Researchers in science education have long held an interest in exploring how to productively engage learners in design thinking. Recent science education reforms that call for students to explain phenomena and solve problems using science and engineering practices have further emphasized the importance of design thinking in science education. As the challenges facing our society continue to grow in number and complexity, supporting learners in developing their capacity for design thinking and problem solving has only become more urgent. Now is an apt time to examine the current DBL approaches in science education to derive new insights and spur further innovation. 

This Special Issue aims to showcase original empirical work where learners engage in DBL approaches to support their science learning, with an emphasis on methodological and theoretical advances, as well as results with tangible implications for policy and practice. Notably, this Special Issue will focus on science learning in classroom settings—at the primary, secondary and higher education levels—and how to organize students’ productive engagement in design thinking within these spaces. 

In this Special Issue, topics may include (but are not limited to) the following:

  • Implementation of novel science curricula focused on engaging students in design thinking;
  • Professional learning opportunities intended to support educators in productively engaging students in DBL in science classrooms;
  • Experiences of students in science classrooms using DBL approaches who identify as members of historically underrepresented groups in STEM;
  • Theoretical frameworks informed by original empirical work that provide insights into science learning using DBL approaches;
  • Assessments for supporting DBL approaches to science learning;
  • Technology and digital tools for facilitating DBL in science classrooms;
  • Design principles informed by original empirical work for developing science learning opportunities integrating DBL;
  • Interdisciplinary approaches that support design thinking in science learning. 

We look forward to receiving your contributions. 

Dr. Samuel Severance
Guest Editor

Manuscript Submission Information

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Keywords

  • design-based learning (DBL)
  • science education
  • design thinking
  • engineering design practices
  • designing solutions
  • student science learning
  • teacher professional learning
  • science education reform
  • school classroom
  • science curriculum

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Published Papers (1 paper)

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Research

13 pages, 1586 KiB  
Article
Usable STEM: Student Outcomes in Science and Engineering Associated with the Iterative Science and Engineering Instructional Model
by Nancy B. Songer, Julia E. Calabrese, Holly Cordner and Daniel Aina
Educ. Sci. 2024, 14(11), 1255; https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci14111255 - 16 Nov 2024
Viewed by 399
Abstract
While our world consistently presents complicated, interdisciplinary problems with STEM foundations, most pre-university curricula do not encourage drawing on multidisciplinary knowledge in the sciences and engineering to create solutions. We developed an instructional approach, Iterative Science and Engineering (ISE), that cycles through scientific [...] Read more.
While our world consistently presents complicated, interdisciplinary problems with STEM foundations, most pre-university curricula do not encourage drawing on multidisciplinary knowledge in the sciences and engineering to create solutions. We developed an instructional approach, Iterative Science and Engineering (ISE), that cycles through scientific investigation and engineering design and culminates in constructing a solution to a local environmental challenge. Next, we created, revised, and evaluated a six-week ISE curricular program, Invasive Insects, culminating in 6th–9th-grade students building traps to mitigate local invasive insect populations. Over three Design-Based Research (DBR) cycles, we gathered and analyzed identical pre and post-test data from 554 adolescents to address the research question: what three-dimensional (3D) science and engineering knowledge do adolescents demonstrate over three DBR cycles associated with a curricular program following the Iterative Science and Engineering instructional approach? Results document students’ significant statistical improvements, with differential outcomes in different cycles. For example, most students demonstrated significant learning of 3D science and engineering argument construction in all cycles—still, students only significantly improved engineering design when they performed guided reflection on their designs and physically built a second trap. Our results suggest that the development, refinement, and empirical evaluation of an ISE curricular program led to students’ design, building, evaluation, and sharing of their learning of mitigating local invasive insect populations. To address complex, interdisciplinary challenges, we must provide opportunities for fluid and iterative STEM learning through scientific investigation and engineering design cycles. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Advancing Science Learning through Design-Based Learning)
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