4.6 Article

Effects of a contextualised reflective mechanism-based augmented reality learning model on students' scientific inquiry learning performances, behavioural patterns, and higher order thinking

Journal

INTERACTIVE LEARNING ENVIRONMENTS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/10494820.2022.2057546

Keywords

Augmented reality; reflection; behavioural pattern; higher order thinking; inquiry; strategy

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [62007010]
  2. Science and Technology Projects in Guangzhou [202102021217]
  3. 2021 Annual Education Planning Project of Guangdong Province Research on the design and application of students' comprehensive competence evaluation in Compulsory Education based on new information ecology [2021JKZQ022]
  4. National College Students' Innovation and Entrepreneurship Training Program Research on the strategy and innovative application of integrating design thinking into augmented reality and scaffold teaching [202110574023]
  5. South China Normal University Challenge Cup Golden Seed Cultivation Project [21JXKA08]
  6. Special Funds of Climbing Program regarding the Cultivation of Guangdong College Students' Scientific and Technological Innovation [pdjh2022 b0145]

Ask authors/readers for more resources

This study designed a contextualised reflective mechanism-based AR learning model to assist students in completing scientific inquiry tasks. The experimental results revealed that this approach improved students' inquiry learning performances and higher order thinking tendency, as well as their observation, comparison, exploration, and reflection behavioral patterns during field trips.
Augmented reality (AR) can represent a contextualised scientific inquiry environment in which students may explore the real world and develop science process skills via interacting with rich information from virtual systems. However, it remains a challenge for most students to complete scientific inquiry tasks without proper support. Research evidence has suggested the potential of reflective scaffolding when applying scientific inquiry. Accordingly, we designed a contextualised reflective mechanism-based AR learning model to assist students in completing scientific inquiry tasks. Guided by the proposed model, we designed four stages of scientific inquiry learning: conceptual understanding, reflective cognition, in-depth inquiry, and knowledge building. A quasi-experiment and lag sequential analysis were conducted by recruiting 81 sixth-grade students to examine the effects of the proposed model on their scientific inquiry learning performances, higher order thinking, and behavioural patterns. The experimental results reveal that the proposed approach improved students' inquiry learning performances and higher order thinking tendency (problem-solving tendency and metacognitive awareness). Moreover, the evidence from this study also suggests that the students who learned with the proposed approach exhibited more observation, comparison, exploration, and reflection behavioural patterns in the field trip than those who learned without the contextualised reflective mechanism. Implications are discussed.

Authors

I am an author on this paper
Click your name to claim this paper and add it to your profile.

Reviews

Primary Rating

4.6
Not enough ratings

Secondary Ratings

Novelty
-
Significance
-
Scientific rigor
-
Rate this paper

Recommended

No Data Available
No Data Available