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- Title
Expanding Opportunities for Systems Thinking, Conceptual Learning, and Participation through Embodied and Computational Modeling.
- Authors
Pierson, Ashlyn E.; Brady, Corey E.
- Abstract
Previous research has established that embodied modeling (role-playing agents in a system) can support learning about complexity. Separately, research has demonstrated that increasing the multimodal resources available to students can support sensemaking, particularly for students classified as English Learners. This study bridges these two bodies of research to consider how embodied models can strengthen an interconnected system of multimodal models created by a classroom. We explore how iteratively refining embodied modeling activities strengthened connections to other models, real-world phenomena, and multimodal representations. Through design-based research in a sixth grade classroom studying ecosystems, we refined embodied modeling activities initially conceived as supports for computational thinking and modeling. Across three iterative cycles, we illustrate how the conceptual and epistemic relationship between the computational and embodied model shifted, and we analyze how these shifts shaped opportunities for learning and participation by: (1) recognizing each student's perspectives as critical for making sense of the model, (2) encouraging students to question and modify the "code" for the model, and (3) leveraging multimodal resources, including graphs, gestures, and student-generated language, for meaning-making. Through these shifts, the embodied model became a full-fledged component of the classroom's model system and created more equitable opportunities for learning and participation.
- Subjects
CONCEPT learning; SYSTEMS theory; STUDENT attitudes; PARTICIPATION; EPISTEMIC logic; SCIENCE education
- Publication
Systems, 2020, Vol 8, Issue 4, p48
- ISSN
2079-8954
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.3390/systems8040048