The impact of a cognitive acceleration programme in science on students in an academically selective high school
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Venville, Grady
Oliver, Mary
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Elsevier
Abstract
This paper describes the impact of a thinking skills programme in science on the cognition
of students in an academically selective high school. The research followed a sequential
explanatory design with the collection and analysis of quantitative data in the first phase
followed by the collection and analysis of qualitative data in the second phase. Participants
were 582 Year 8 and Year 9 (ages 12–14) high school students and their science teachers
fromeight schools who participated inThinking Science, a 2-year classroominterventionand
teacher professional learning programme. The schools included one academically selective
high school (n = 144) and seven non-academically selective schools (n = 438). Quantitative
data were collected by Piagetian reasoning tasks administered to all students before and
after the intervention. Qualitative data included interviews with the head of science and
three participating science teachers from the academically selective school. Over the 2-
year period, students from the academically selective school had a greater mean gain with
a large effect size (d = 0.995) when compared with the control (n = 120) and when compared with other students who participated in the intervention with a medium effect size
(d = 0.687). The qualitative data indicated that science teachers in the academically selective school were committed to the intervention and explained how they had changed their
pedagogy as a result ofthe professional learning programme. More specifically,the teachers
developed teaching strategies specific to the characteristics of their academically talented
students that enabled them to participate in thinking activities such as metacognition and
social construction. In conclusion, Thinking Science was a worthwhile intervention for all
participating students, but particularly for students in the academically selective school
where teachers were able to adapt their pedagogy and the approach to suit their students.
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Thinking Skills and Creativity
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Open Access
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CC BY-NC-ND license
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