2012
DOI: 10.1007/s11251-012-9242-5
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Learning “to do” and learning “about” inquiry at the same time: different outcomes in valuing the importance of various intellectual tasks in planning, enacting, and evaluating an inquiry curriculum

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Cited by 18 publications
(17 citation statements)
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“…This is consistent with Meijer’s (2007) observation that a research-methods course improved but did not guarantee inquiry understanding. It is also compatible with the comparison by Syer, Chichekian, Shore, and Aulls (2012) in which student-teachers who had inquiry experiences as teachers were directly comparable with psychology undergraduates who had done a major research project in recognition and valuing of major elements of doing inquiry. However, the education students were better able to articulate the inquiry as a pedagogical approach.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 66%
“…This is consistent with Meijer’s (2007) observation that a research-methods course improved but did not guarantee inquiry understanding. It is also compatible with the comparison by Syer, Chichekian, Shore, and Aulls (2012) in which student-teachers who had inquiry experiences as teachers were directly comparable with psychology undergraduates who had done a major research project in recognition and valuing of major elements of doing inquiry. However, the education students were better able to articulate the inquiry as a pedagogical approach.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 66%
“…Instead, they could include more "Type-III" independent research and inquiry projects for students on topics of interest (Renzulli, 1986). Research suggests these can have many positive outcomes, even at the undergraduate level (Syer, Chichekian, Shore, & Aulls, 2013), and the emphasis on process, rather than just the final product might lessen the performance component. Incorporating several "mini-assignments" in the form of drafts, where the student is given formative feedback and points are given based on submission itself rather than content, might help students overcome their perfectionistic worries.…”
Section: Educational Implicationsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…There are parallel versions for students, parents, and teachers, and adaptations have been developed to assess self-efficacy to use inquiry as a learner or teacher (e.g., Chichekian & Shore, 2014; Ibrahim, 2014). The MSDIQ discriminated between newly enrolled and senior preservice teachers’ understanding of inquiry (Shore et al, 2012), and between preservice teachers’ and honors psychology students’ ability to understand versus do inquiry (Syer, Chichekian, Shore, & Aulls, 2013). Nevertheless, it imposes work in respondents’ “free” time, it is long, and subscales need to be tallied.…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%