Cm. Hoadley et Mc. Linn, Teaching science through online, peer discussions: SpeakEasy in the Knowledge Integration Environment, INT J SCI E, 22(8), 2000, pp. 839-857
Can students learn science from a carefully designed online peer discussion
? This research contrasts two formats of contributed comments - historical
debate and narrative text - and assesses the impact of an asynchronous disc
ussion on student understanding of the nature of light. Students discuss th
e question: Why do paint chips look different colours in the hardware store
than they do at home? We find that students gain integrated understanding
of the nature of the colour from both discussion formats. The historical de
bate format succeeds for more students in part because the alternative view
s are more memorable and in part because the debate format models the proce
ss of distinguishing ideas. We discuss how online, asynchronous peer discus
sions can be designed to enhance cohesive understanding of science.