3.9 Article

A three-pronged method to analyse pre-service teachers' understanding and epistemic reasoning about soil

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL EDUCATION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00219266.2023.2282430

Keywords

Soil education; soil literacy; mental models; expressed models; early teacher training

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This study investigated pre-service teachers' mental models of the nature of soil through three different approaches: phenomenographic analysis, categorization of labelled-drawings, and analysis of questionnaire responses. Based on the analysis, four explanatory categories were identified, with the structural category being the most represented. The findings revealed that while students had some understanding of soil composition, their understanding of its origin and degradation processes was limited. The study highlighted the importance of using diverse approaches to comprehend students' conceptions and epistemic models of soil.
Pre-service teachers' mental models of the nature of soil were investigated in a sample of 181 students from four different Spanish universities, using three different methodological approaches: a phenomenographic analysis of definitions, a categorisation of labelled-drawings and the analysis of answers to a questionnaire consisting of both open- and closed-ended questions. Based on the phenomenographic analysis, four explanatory categories were defined: paedological (soil as a highly complex system); anthropocentric (soil from a utilitarian point of view); structural (soil as a layer of Earth) and naive view (soil as a surface of unknown composition and function). The most represented category in the studied sample was the structural one. Based on the questionnaire and the drawing analysis, students have some notions about soil composition, but their understating of its origin and degradation processes is scarce. No significant correlation was found between the analyses conducted using the three different instruments, thus indicating the need to use different approaches to better understand students' conceptions and their 'intermediate' epistemic models of soil. Finally, some implications for soil education are discussed.

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