Coordinating the effects of multiple variables: A skill fundamental to scientific thinking |
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Authors: | Deanna Kuhn Maria Pease Clarice Wirkala |
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Affiliation: | 1. Faculty of Materials Science and Engineering, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland;2. Institute of High Pressure Physics of the Polish Academy of Sciences, Poland;1. Department of Electronics and Communications Engineering, Al-Nahrain University, Baghdad, Iraq;2. Department of Electrical Engineering and Electronics, The University of Liverpool, Liverpool L69 3GJ, UK;1. Consorzio RFX, Euratom-ENEA Association, Corso Stati Uniti 4, Padova 35127, Italy;2. Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 175 Albany Street, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA;1. Morfología Vegetal, Fac. Ciencias Agrarias, University Nac. Del Litoral, Kreder 2805, 3080 Esperanza, Santa Fe, Argentina;2. Instituto de Agrobiotecnología del Litoral (UNL-CONICET), Esperanza, Santa Fe, Argentina;1. Department of Neurosurgery, Spine Health Wooridul Hospital, Busan, Korea;2. Department of Cardiothoracic Surgery, Spine Health Wooridul Hospital, Busan, Korea;3. Department of Neurosurgery, Seoul St. Mary''s Hospital, Seoul, Korea;4. Department of Neurosurgery, Spine Health Wooridul Hospital Gangnam, Seoul, Korea |
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Abstract: | The skill of predicting outcomes based on simultaneous effects of multiple factors was examined. Over five sessions, 91 sixth graders engaged this task either individually or in pairs and either preceded or followed by six sessions on the more widely studied inquiry task that requires designing and interpreting experiments to identify individual effects. Final assessment, while indicating a high level of mastery on the inquiry task, showed progress but continuing conceptual challenges on the multivariable prediction task having to do with understanding of variables, variable levels, and consistency of a variable’s operation across occasions. Task order had a significant but limited effect, and social collaboration conferred only a temporary benefit that disappeared in a final individual assessment. In a follow-up study, the lack of effect of social collaboration was confirmed, as was that of feedback on incorrect answers. Although fundamental to science, the concept that variables operate jointly and, under equivalent conditions, consistently across occasions is one that children appear to acquire only gradually and, therefore, one that cannot be assumed to be in place. |
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