Dialogic Teaching during Cooperative Inquiry-Based Science: A Case Study of a Year 6 Classroom
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Dialogic Teaching and Learning
1.2. Inquiry-Based Science
1.3. Purpose of the Case Study
2. Method
2.1. Context for the Study
2.2. Measures
2.2.1. Teacher Language
2.2.2. Student Language
3. Results and Discussion
3.1. Teacher–Student Language Interactions during Lesson 1–6
- T: OK... meaning what? That’s not very close to tectonic plates what are your thoughts- what are you saying? (Open question)
- S: I reckon we didn’t hear about it because we’re on the other side of the country and because we’re on one side of the country so there’s no need to worry then, because it’s a different part of the country and a different state. (Explanation)
- T: OK, alright, point taken. (Encourager) And last one, Billie?
- S: I think because when they find out when the earthquakes actually happen you don’t feel it in one spot. They feel it from around the areas and then they figure out where the earthquake is. (Explanation)
- T: Right. interesting, interesting. OK. So we take all that information with us, have a look here; let’s have a look at this map a little bit deeper now. And let’s see if we, we change our minds on any of those facts. Last 4 h would be red, last 24 h that orange colour, and we can see one here, and then other. So, those others have to be within those last 7 days though (Mediates)
- S: Can they say magnitude? (Closed question)
- T: No, sorry, yes. This here is our magnitude. So you’ll be able to have a look at your computers later on, but you’ve got the size of the dot. So if I can have a look at some of those smaller dots, smaller Richter on the—smaller magnitude. OK? The larger dots are going to have the larger magnitude. And the most awesome part about this website, I just was very excited, I never knew it even existed! If I go and click on one of these, let’s go to this one here that’s happened in the last 4 h, the last 24 h sorry? (Mediates)
- S: Does it show a video? (Closed question)
- T: No, it doesn’t show me a video. But what it does do, it takes me to where it is, yes, OK, it tells me the magnitude—5, OK, the depth of it, 96 km... now, I want you to think about that depth and remember it later on. As a researcher—when you’re researching, see if that makes a difference. 96km. (Mediates) Let’s have a lookie here. So, this happened at—what time, if it’s 22:15? 22:15, come on, put our maths brains on.
- S: 10:15 pm
- T: OK? 10:15 pm. Let’s go into estimated shaking and damage. Do you think a magnitude of—a magnitude of 5 is going to give much damage? (Open question)
- S: Not a lot...
- T: You’re saying no- yeah- some? So you’re thinking, thinking? OK. Let’s have a look. And you’ll see this red here, this information has not been finalised yet because they’re obviously doing more and more, um, investigations of it first. Is estimated this earthquake could have been felt 169 km away and that circle shows you. It could have caused damage up to 13km away. So, they would have felt it right down here. OK? They’re saying it happened here... what do I say where I—it’s, it’s happened? What do I call that spot just there? (Mediates)
- S: Epicentre
- T: Epicentre. OK. So they’re saying this is where the location of it was. But they’re saying they could feel it right down here as well. OK? So 169 km away. The damage could have been felt 13 km away from it. So when you go into this one, it is a great website to go in, just have a look and look at all the little bits of information. Um, this is where.... now. The following map shows the location of the stations that detect this earthquake. How could a station down here feel that earthquake? How could that be possible? And that’s my question for you today. How could these—this station down here, find out these scientists know that earthquake happened right up there. How could they have felt that? OK? How did they sense that? How did they know? They didn’t actually feel the ground shaking right down there. OK, because it’s way more than 169 km, you’re actually going to do some more exploring there (Mediates).
- S2: Right! Next part is how do scientists measure the size of earthquakes? They use seismographs reporting... Do you want to see a picture? Come on. That was the seismograph and that was, this is doing the heartbeat. (Explanation)
- S3: Oh yeah, I saw that picture I was doing a questionnaire for … Okay, so next person is, I’m going. Okay, you do the first question, Ashley you can do the second question.
- S4: Okay. So I wrote... Scientists know there’ll be another earthquake in the future and scientists try in many ways to predict earthquakes (Explanation)
- S2: And what are those many ways? (Open question)
- S3: So that just explains your question. Can scientists predict earthquakes? No, and it is unlikely that...
- S4: No. It’s unlikely scientists will ever predict (Explanation)
- S3: Seismograms can help locate where the earthquake happened. If they’re seconds between hearing or feeling the earthquake you’re sure then you know it’s close. So that means if you feel the earthquake quite quickly that means you’re close to the earthquake. If it takes a long time to reach you it would most likely be far away (Explanation). Scientists use a method called,—I don’t know how to say it but it’s tria...lation
- S2: Triangulation
- S3: It helps to find exactly where the earthquake happened… So I’ll show you a picture of it. It’s this, so what happens is it locates where you can feel it and then the epicenter is where you all of them part ...(Explanation)
- S2: Next question
- S3: Oh, and I’ve also got one more, the actual one would be: P waves was the primary waves so like lightning and S waves are like thunders, so as it says up there, it says that because if the P waves is like the epicenter, which is like the lightning, which is the epicenter and thunder is like the S wave, which it takes a long time to get to you, so if it takes say three seconds to get to you, the thunders to get to you, you know the earthquake is like quite close to you, I mean..(Explanation)
- T: They found it was too wobbly, square and rectangle…. OK, what Jordan suggested, needed that extra triangle across…OK, so what did you notice? What did you notice, how did—what did they have to go through, what stage did they have to go through to be able to go “this is what—how it’s going to work best”—Tatiana? (Open question)
- S: They had to plan (Explanation)
- T: They had to plan it out together, how did they plan? How did they plan? Everyone—one person was control? No, everyone contributed, yep. What else happened? Quinn? (Open question)
- S: They tested to see what would work. (Explanation)
- T: Yep, did a bit of testing. Found out some things that weren’t going so well. What did they do then, then? If it wasn’t going so well? (Open question)
- S: They had a few more ideas like adding more poles and stuff in? (Explanation)
- T: Excellent. (Encouragement) Can you now see if you have a look at your tabs in your technology folder which section they would be up to? What section when they—when things weren’t going so well…? (Open question)
- S: Ideation?
- T: Ideation? Further along. Produce—they had to produce it. And then what was the last one? (Closed question)
- S: Evaluation
- T: Evaluation. So they evaluated it wasn’t working so well and then they had to go back to the producing stage. That’s exactly what you’re going to do. They didn’t write it down, but at different times you’re going to have to write down when you’re producing, you’re going to have to go, ooh, I’m going to evaluate this, this is not working. OK? And you would write down how you’re going to make—what changes you’re going to make. That’s what they did. OK? They did that process but with a chair. You’re going to do it with a building. Alright? So we also noticed—what was the strongest shape? How did they make it stronger? (Closed question)
- S: Triangles (Explanation)
- T: They had to go with that triangles.
- S2: Okay, the first question is, someone can do the next question, [reads] why do you think the gum drop dome worked? Explain in terms of pushes and pulls. Okay
- S1: Because, first it always stick very well to the toothpicks (Explanation)
- S2: Pushes and pulls, something that has to do with pushes and pulls (Prompts)
- S4: I got one. Oh, I reckon it didn’t hold as well because this falls in the middle (Explanation)
- S2: No, why do you think they worked? (Open question)
- S4: Oh, because of the triangles, they’ve got supporting stuff at the bottom (Explanation)
- S1: push and pull factor (Explanation)
- S4: Yeah
- S3: I’ll just move this over here.
- S4: Okay, Quinn
- S3: I’ve got nothing yet
- S2: Okay, well I think they worked because the dictionary’s pushing down on this first thing but the triangles …(Explanation—referring to the ability of the dome to withstand the pressure of the weight of the dictionary)
- S1: They had extra support when it came to this
- S2: Yeah, the triangles allowed extra support when it came down it just didn’t collapse as much (Explanation)
- T: That’s right, the pressure goes to these particular spots. If you have no corners the pressure is spread out evenly around the whole shape. Okay so that’s why a circle can handle it, the cylinder could handle more pressure because it didn’t have any corners taking…the corners, corner places were taking pressure. Okay, so that’s what’s crushing. (Mediates)
- S: What about if we didn’t, like, sticky tape it together and there was just like a paper cylinder with no sticky tape anymore?
- T: Then it is going to fall apart, yeah. A cylinder has to be stuck together to be able to make it stay, so yeah, you could. Are you thinking about using a cylinder in yours somewhere? (Mediates)
- S: (inaudible)
- T: Yeah, okay, keep going then. So write down little answer there if that was your question. (Maintenance)
- T: Have you answered all your questions have we? Or are all your inquiry questions answered? You’re done? Okay, let’s have a look at some of them and what were some of yours Trey? (Maintenance)
- S: (inaudible)
- T: Okay so you’ve already agreed as a group cause you’re going to go with the pyramid style? Yep, okay. (Maintenance)
- S: Not really
- T: Not really? Okay, what reinforcements are you thinking?(Open question)
- S: Cardboard, tape and cardboard strips.
- T: Okay, awesome. (Encouragement) Hang on, I’ll just let these guys know. I’ll come back to you.
- T: Okay guys you’re in your last two minutes. (Pause) Keep going. Don’t let me stop you. (Maintenance)
- S: How do we use the reinforcement by diagonally, by di, by diagonally, I don’t know how to say it, by diagonally placing them on the poles, ah the strips?
- T: Okay so you’re going to have braces, is that what you are talking about? You’re going to have bracing? Okay? What was one of your questions Jamie? Did you guys all come up with the same questions at the very beginning? Did you? Oh, okay. (Mediates)
- S3: How will you make it strong?
- S1: How will we make it strong?
- S2: By using cross-bracing and sheer walls (Explanation)
- S3: The crosses and all that sorta of stuff…How will we construct each layer? (Explanation)
- S1: With like those four pieces of paper (Explanation)
- S3: What type of area?
- S2: Area
- S3: Area is it in?
- S2: Well we haven’t worked that out yet so just any area
- S1: Just like…
- S2: In Alltown (Explanation)
- S1: Yeah, just in a town because they say it was in a town, didn’t they?
- S3: Will each layer increase in strength?
- S1: Well it should, because each layer is going to have more weight on it. And we should have more cross braces and stuff (Explanation)
- S2: Ok. I’ve got none. I don’t have any
- S1: Yeah you do, which is stronger, a triangle or an arch?
- S2: But we already know that
- S1: Well then an arch is stronger, isn’t it? (Explanation)
- S3: An arch is stronger.
- S1: I said that first
- S2: Well I already knew that.
- S3: So, this is meningitis, so go down to you meningitis thing. (Direction)
- S2: Meningitis, where’s that?
- S3: And tick, you’ve got to tick (Direction)
- S1: Don’t you need to put another card down with this one?
- S2: No
- S3: No, just do this first, you’ve got to tick, on the symptoms you’ve got to tick inflammation of the spinal cord or brain (Direction)
- S1: Where’s that?
- S3: That one (Direction)
- S2: It’s the big box (Direction)
- S3: Yeah the big one, on the symptoms. Yeah, and then also attacks, and form of transmission is water so tick droplets and then for control, tick (Explanation)
- S1: Tissues
- S3: Tissues?
- S1: Tissues and vaccination
- S3: What does it mean by tissues though?
- T: A yeast infection? You do that with your group first, OK? And then decide where to put it through. OK, so it’s not a talking time yet, you’re writing any facts you can and put it onto your chart. OK? And then we’ll see how much they compare to each other. Off you go. (Mediates)
- T: Yep, so if it’s, if it’s an evil one? Yep, produces toxin, good, you put it there. OK, so what’s something you wrote down there, Dylan? (Closed question)
- S: Um… there’s good and bad bacteria.
- T: Good and bad bacteria, so where would we put that one? (Mediates)
- S: Um… in between?
- T: Yeah, I’d put it, even with the bacteria. On that word itself.
- S: <inaudible>
- T: Yeah, put it with the bacteria section. Ashley, what have you got? What did you? No, but tell me something that you learnt on that video, that you didn’t know beforehand. (Mediates)
- S: Um, that…
- T: Where are some bacteria found? (Closed question)
- S: In food
- T: What food? (Closed question)
- S: <inaudible>
- T: What food were they talking about at the end? They said there’s good bacteria found there. (Open question)
- S: Yoghurt?
- T: Yoghurt! OK, so yoghurt can be… where will it fit? (Closed question)
- S3: Okay, Anna what’s what you said? (Open question)
- S4: Some bacteria help us (Explanation)
- S3: How? Did you write how? (Open question)
- S4: No
- S3: What did you write? (Closed question)
- S1: Bacteria is important because it can kill viruses (Explanation)
- S2: Sometimes…No copying Dean
- S1: Is that correct? (Closed question)
- S3: I don’t know
- S2: No. Only sometimes
- S3: What did you write? (Open question)
- S2: I’ve only got this one: Bacteria is important because it sometimes helps you and maybe provides stuff for us (Explanation)
- S3: Yeah, but you need to write how
- S1: Yes
- S2: Because it provides stuff for us
- S3: What stuff? (Open question)
- S2: I’m not sure
- T: Have you got why, what have I got? And have you got why it’s definitely that? Can you choose a disease and tell me why it’s not definitely something else. You’ve got to justify, you’ve got to say why it is and why it’s definitely that and choose another one and say it’s definitely not this because …? (Open question)
- S: Malaria [inaudible] mosquitoes….
- T: Why not cholera? (Open question)
- S: smallpox
- T: Mmmmm have you written that down. Ok you have to be able to prove to me ok? (Basic statement)
- T: [new group, listens for a moment] Oh! really? I think I’m this. Why? (Open question)
- S: because when you had your itichy …when you have malaria it spread through the mosquitos and the parasites and all. So you were in a tropical area,
- T: What about HIV? (Open question)
- S: You wouldn’t have HIV because that…
- S2: It doesn’t show up like straight away and you don’t have
- S1: any symptoms like the vomiting and that?
- T: You guys need to start to write down what you think it is and give me reasons and what it’s definitely not and you’ve just been talking about it. Why is it not HIV, why is it not cholera and why is it not smallpox. Ok you’ve got to write those things down. (Mediates)
- T: Doctors, I just want to warn you that you have to have what it is and why. Why it’s not that disease, why it’s not that disease and why it can’t possibly be that disease [counting off on fingers] So four parts to your summary before you give it to me cause otherwise I won’t believe you. I’ll think oh great doctor this is, ok. So you’ve really got to be to convince me that this is my illness. (maintenance)
- S3: Well, I’m doing Malaria
- S2: Malaria is transmitted by....
- S3: Malaria is transmitted by [inaudible] on mosquitos (Explanation)
- S2: What?
- S3: Mosquitos
- S2: Bitten by mosquitos (Explanation)
- S3: Yeah, you get bitten by mosquitos
- S2: I have no idea what you’re saying... too loud
- S3: It gives you aids
- S1& S2: What??
- S3: No, no, no, it gives you head-aches [laughs] sorry (Explanation)
- S1: That was nice {inaudible], okay?
- S3: Treatment?
- S1: How can you control it? (Open question)
- S3: How can you control it? They control it through the malaria DDT program (Explanation)
3.2. Summary of Teacher–Student Language during Lessons 1–6
3.3. Limitations
4. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Lesson | Basic Statement | Open Question | Closed Question | Mediates | Encourage | Maintenance |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | 14 | 33 | 10 | 30 | 1 | 11 |
2 | 13 | 26 | 14 | 23 | 7 | 16 |
3 | 13 | 5 | 10 | 24 | 9 | 39 |
4 | 27 | 1 | 16 | 11 | 8 | 37 |
5 | 26 | 7 | 11 | 21 | 15 | 20 |
6 | 32 | 36 | 16 | 1 | 5 | 10 |
Lessons | Groups | Social Language | Basic Statement | Basic Science | Moderate Science | Advanced Science |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Group 1 | 10 | 39 | 27 | 24 | |
2 | Group 1 | 33 | 18 | 42 | 7 | |
Group 2 | 33 | 5 | 56 | 6 | ||
3 | Group 1 | 54 | 1 | 44 | 2 | |
Group 2 | 77 | 7 | 10 | 6 | ||
4 | Group 1 | 36 | 51 | 12 | 1 | |
Group 2 | 21 | 66 | 11 | 1 | ||
5 | Group 1 | 5 | 87 | 4 | 3 | |
Group 2 | 6 | 90 | 2 | 1 | ||
6 | Group 1 | – | – | 35 | 50 | 15 |
Group 2 | – | – | 50 | 17 | 33 |
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Gillies, R.M. Dialogic Teaching during Cooperative Inquiry-Based Science: A Case Study of a Year 6 Classroom. Educ. Sci. 2020, 10, 328. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110328
Gillies RM. Dialogic Teaching during Cooperative Inquiry-Based Science: A Case Study of a Year 6 Classroom. Education Sciences. 2020; 10(11):328. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110328
Chicago/Turabian StyleGillies, Robyn M. 2020. "Dialogic Teaching during Cooperative Inquiry-Based Science: A Case Study of a Year 6 Classroom" Education Sciences 10, no. 11: 328. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110328
APA StyleGillies, R. M. (2020). Dialogic Teaching during Cooperative Inquiry-Based Science: A Case Study of a Year 6 Classroom. Education Sciences, 10(11), 328. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci10110328