A Positioning Theory Analysis of Interaction Surrounding Design Failures in an Elementary Engineering Club

Q1 Social Sciences
Katarina N. Silvestri, Mary B. McVee, Lynn E. Shanahan, Kenneth English
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

This qualitative study applies Positioning Theory to identify positions that mediate the experiences of design failure within the context of an afterschool engineering club (EC) with elementary students diverse in language, race, ethnicity, gender, and academic abilities. We ask: (1) What kinds of structural design failure and failure responses did participants in EC experience? and (2) What are students’ and teachers’ positions in relation to responses to design failure? Types of positions (e.g., builder, tinkerer, idea-elicitor, director, observer) were identified in relation to children’s and teachers’ actions and speech in response to structural design failure during EC. Participants included 12 third-grade students and four teachers involved in EC for eight weeks. Data sources include audio transcripts, video, and field notes. Twenty-four design failure episodes were identified and transcribed multimodally from video, followed by coding of episodes using a multimodal Positioning Theory analytical framework. Findings discuss the kinds of engineering design actions and associated positionings unfolding in response to failure as well as the positions mediating teacher and student responses to design. We highlight the importance of student and teacher mediation as well as how Positioning Theory can be used to expand our understanding of (re)positionings that can occur within responses to design failure. Specifically, elementary engineering curricular materials must create the context to support the range of positions taken up in response to design failure. This includes explicit modeling of discursive actions surrounding design failure, multiple opportunities for students to experience and respond to design failure with time to improve beyond the design–build–test model, and support for teachers to address the range of students’ responses to design failures knowledgeably and flexibly.
某基础工程社团设计失败交互的定位理论分析
本定性研究运用定位理论,在一个课后工程俱乐部(EC)的背景下,找出在不同语言、种族、民族、性别和学术能力的小学生中调解设计失败经验的职位。我们的问题是:(1)EC参与者经历了哪些类型的结构设计失效和失效响应?(2)学生和教师对设计失败的反应是什么?在EC期间,针对结构设计失败,儿童和教师的行为和言语,确定了不同类型的职位(如建造者、修补者、想法引出者、主管、观察者)。参与者包括12名三年级学生和4名参与了为期8周的英语教学的老师。数据源包括音频记录、视频和现场记录。从视频中识别和转录了24个设计失败事件,然后使用多模态定位理论分析框架对事件进行编码。研究结果讨论了工程设计行为的种类和在应对失败时展开的相关定位,以及调节教师和学生对设计反应的位置。我们强调了学生和教师调解的重要性,以及如何使用定位理论来扩展我们对设计失败反应中可能发生的(重新)定位的理解。具体地说,基础工程课程材料必须创造上下文,以支持对设计失败所采取的一系列立场。这包括围绕设计失败的话语行为的明确建模,为学生提供多种机会,让他们有时间体验和应对设计失败,以改进设计-构建-测试模型,并支持教师明智而灵活地解决学生对设计失败的反应范围。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.90
自引率
0.00%
发文量
6
审稿时长
32 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pre-College Engineering Education Research (J-PEER) is issued electronically twice a year and serves as a forum and community space for the publication of research and evaluation reports on areas of pre-college STEM education, particularly in engineering. J-PEER targets scholars and practitioners in the new and expanding field of pre-college engineering education. This journal invites authors to submit their original and unpublished work in the form of (1) research papers or (2) shorter practitioner reports in numerous areas of STEM education, with a special emphasis on cross-disciplinary approaches incorporating engineering. J-PEER publishes a wide range of topics, including but not limited to: research articles on elementary and secondary students’ learning; curricular and extracurricular approaches to teaching engineering in elementary and secondary school; professional development of teachers and other school professionals; comparative approaches to curriculum and professional development in engineering education; parents’ attitudes toward engineering; and the learning of engineering in informal settings.
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