A sociocultural perspective on mediated activity in third grade science

by Reveles, John M.; Kelly, Gregory J.; Durán, Richard P.

This ethnographic study of a third grade classroom examined elementary school science learning as a sociocultural accomplishment. The research focused on how a teacher helped his students acquire psychological tools for learning to think and engage in scientific practices as locally defined. Analyses of classroom discourse examined both how the teacher used mediational strategies to frame disciplinary knowledge in science as well as how students internalized and appropriated ways of knowing in science. The study documented and analyzed how students came to appropriate scientific knowledge as their own in an ongoing manner tied to their identities as student scientists. Implications for sociocultural theory in science education research are discussed.

DOI: 10.1007/s11422-006-9019-8
Online Date: 9/30/2006
Print publication date: 2/1/2007
View article on SpringerLink

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