“…In this new approach, the research team has drawn upon research on expertise (Bransford et al, 2000;Chi et al, 1981;Dogusoy-Taylan & Cagiltay, 2014;Glaser & Chi, 1988;Sternberg, 1999aSternberg, , 2005, research and practice in the use of concept maps in science education (Asan, 2007;BouJaoude & Attieh, 2008;_ Ingec¸, 2009;Lopez et al, 2011;Rice et al, 1998;Ruiz-Primo, 2004;Ruiz-Primo et al, 2001), and our own previous experiences with the use of concept maps to evaluate students' deep understanding of concepts and their interrelationships (Erdimez et al, 2017;Tan et al, 2017;Zimmerman et al, 2011). Using Sternberg's (1999a) concept of intelligence as developing expertise, the research team chose concept maps as a way to identify students' levels of developing expertise, which included their ability to identify relationships among concepts, map the hierarchical relationships between and among concepts, and generate "new or novel ideas or associations between existing concepts" (Dino, 2017, p. 24), thereby demonstrating their domain-relevant knowledge and skills and creativity-relevant processes needed for exceptional productivity and performance in the two STEM areas of life and physical science.…”