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Finding faults: analogical comparison supports spatial concept learning in geoscience
Authors:Benjamin D Jee  David H Uttal  Dedre Gentner  Cathy Manduca  Thomas F Shipley  Bradley Sageman
Institution:1. Department of Education, College of the Holy Cross, 1 College Street, Worcester, MA, 01610, USA
2. Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
3. Science Education Resource Center, Carleton College, Northfield, MN, USA
4. Department of Psychology, Temple University, Philadelphia, PA, USA
5. Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Northwestern University, Evanston, IL, USA
Abstract:A central issue in education is how to support the spatial thinking involved in learning science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM). We investigated whether and how the cognitive process of analogical comparison supports learning of a basic spatial concept in geoscience, fault. Because of the high variability in the appearance of faults, it may be difficult for students to learn the category-relevant spatial structure. There is abundant evidence that comparing analogous examples can help students gain insight into important category-defining features (Gentner in Cogn Sci 34(5):752–775, 2010). Further, comparing high-similarity pairs can be especially effective at revealing key differences (Sagi et al. 2012). Across three experiments, we tested whether comparison of visually similar contrasting examples would help students learn the fault concept. Our main findings were that participants performed better at identifying faults when they (1) compared contrasting (fault/no fault) cases versus viewing each case separately (Experiment 1), (2) compared similar as opposed to dissimilar contrasting cases early in learning (Experiment 2), and (3) viewed a contrasting pair of schematic block diagrams as opposed to a single block diagram of a fault as part of an instructional text (Experiment 3). These results suggest that comparison of visually similar contrasting cases helped distinguish category-relevant from category-irrelevant features for participants. When such comparisons occurred early in learning, participants were more likely to form an accurate conceptual representation. Thus, analogical comparison of images may provide one powerful way to enhance spatial learning in geoscience and other STEM disciplines.
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