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EviDenk - Analyzing and promoting evidence-based reasoning and teaching in pre-service teachers

  • Start date: 01.07.2018
  • Funded by: DFG (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft)
  • Principal investigator: Prof. Dr. Ingo Kollar
  • Participating researchers: Dr. Martin Greisel, Christina Wekerle, M.A.
  • External scientists / cooperations: Prof. Dr. Robin Stark,?Dr. Kai Wagner

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Abstract

Solving pedagogical problems on the basis of scientific theories and research findings is referred to as evidence-based reasoning and teaching (Stark, 2017). Research on both pre- and in-service teachers shows that both groups often have extreme difficulties engaging in this kind of practice. In cooperation with the University of the Saarland (Prof. Dr. Robin Stark), this project contrasts the cognitive processes and activities making up the evidence-based reasoning scripts (Schank, 1999) of pre- and in-service teachers, as well as educational researchers. We seek to detect those processes and activities that characterise an effective (cognitive) evidence-based reasoning script. Based on these findings, two further studies investigate different concepts for fostering these scripts (e.g. specific kinds of presentations, format of scientific evidence, as well as process- and reflection-prompts).

Description

Teachers face a variety of pedagogical challenges in their classrooms, e.g. motivating disengaged students, catering for students with different cognitive, motivational and ethnic preconditions or assessing learning gains and achievement in an objective, reliable and valid way. Increasingly, teachers are demanded to solve these problems in an “evidence-based” manner (e.g. Bromme, Prenzel & J?ger, 2014). Decisions for a certain course of action ought not to be based on “gut-feeling”, but instead firmly grounded in scientific research and evidence (KMK, 2004).

However, what is currently still a black box is the question of what extent university-based teacher education supports pre-service teachers in the development of evidence-based reasoning and teaching skills. So far, research has demonstrated deficits in pre-service teachers’ use of scientific findings (e.g. Wagner, Klein, Klopp, & Stark, 2014) which are in part connected to unfavourable beliefs and motivational orientations (e.g. Parr & Timperley, 2008) or the available knowledge-based (e.g. Star & Strickland, 2008). Consequently, in many instances pre-service teachers fall back on subjective theories (e.g. Furinghetti & Pehkonen, 2002) to address pedagogical problems.

Given this situation, the project investigates further into the reasons behind this lack of evidence-based reasoning in pre-service teachers. In contrast to previous research, we address this endeavour in a two-fold way: on the plain of cognitive processes, we apply a script perspective (Schank, 1999) and investigate the cognitive activities of pre- and in-service teachers, as well as educational researchers when solving pedagogical problems, using contrastive analyses. On the plain of content, the type (scientific vs. experiential) and amount of knowledge used to address the problems is analysed (Study 1).

In Studies 2 and 3, we use experimental designs to explore the benefits of different support mechanisms (specific presentation formats of scientific evidence, process- and reflection-prompts) to foster evidence-based reasoning with regard to both plains and develop effective evidence-based reasoning scripts in students.

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Funding:

Funded by the German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, DFG, KO 3462/3-1)

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Publications:

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Bauer, J. & Kollar, I. (2023). (Wie) kann die Nutzung bildungswissenschaftlicher Evidenz Lehren und Lernen verbessern? Thesen und Fragen zur Diskussion um evidenzorientiertes Denken und Handeln von Lehrkr?ften. Unterrichtswissenschaft,?50(1), 123-147.

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Greisel, M., Wekerle, C., Wilkes, T., Stark, R. & Kollar, I. (2023). Pre-service teachers’ evidence-informed reasoning: Do attitudes, normative beliefs, and self-efficacy facilitate the use of scientific theories while analyzing teaching problems? Psychology Learning and Teaching, 22(1), 20-38.?

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Kollar, I., Greisel, M., Krause-Wichmann, T. & Stark, R. (2023). Editorial: Evidence-informed reasoning of pre- and in-service teachers. Frontiers in Education, 8. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2023.1188022

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Krause-Wichmann, T., Greisel, M., Wekerle, C., Kollar, I. & Stark, R. (2023). Promoting future teachers‘ evidence-informed reasoning scripts: effects of different forms of instruction after problem-solving. Frontiers in Education, 8. https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2023.1001523

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Wekerle, C. & Kollar, I. (2022). Using technology to promote student learning? An analysis of pre- and in-service teachers’ lesson plans. Technology, Pedagogy and Education, 31(5), 597-614.?

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Csanadi, A., Kollar, I., & Fischer, F. (2021). Pre-service teachers' evidence-based reasoning during pedagogical problem-solving: better together??European Journal of Psychology of Education, 36(1),?147-168.?

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Kiemer, K. & Kollar, I. (2021). Source selection and source use during evidence-informed reasoning: Do pre-service teachers‘ beliefs regarding the utility of (non-)scientific information sources matter? Zeitschrift für P?dagogische Psychologie, 35(2-3), 127-141.??

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Wekerle, C. & Kollar, I. (2021). Fostering pre-service teachers’situation-specific technological pedagogical knowledge – Does learning by mapping and learning from worked examples help??Computers in Human Behavior, 115, 106617.??

Contact

Assistant professor
Faculty of Philosophy and Social Sciences

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Scientific researcher, project coordinator "KodiLL"
Educational psychology

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