Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective

Purpose - Argumentative practices are central to science education, and have recently been emphasised to promote students' reasoning skills and to develop student's understanding of scientific concepts. This study examines the mastery of scientific argumentation, based on the concept of ne...

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Main Authors: Heng, Lee Ling, Surif, Johari, Seng, Cher Hau, Ibrahim, Nor Hasniza
Format: Article
Published: Elsevier B.V. 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/58504/
http://dx.doi.org/10.32890/mjli2015.12.5
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Institution: Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
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spelling my.utm.585042022-04-07T03:22:04Z http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/58504/ Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective Heng, Lee Ling Surif, Johari Seng, Cher Hau Ibrahim, Nor Hasniza H Social Sciences (General) Purpose - Argumentative practices are central to science education, and have recently been emphasised to promote students' reasoning skills and to develop student's understanding of scientific concepts. This study examines the mastery of scientific argumentation, based on the concept of neutralisation, among secondary level science students, when engaged in individual and group argumentations. Methodology - 356 form four science students were first randomly assigned to an argumentative condition, after their lesson on acids and bases, presented using the developed instructional materials. Each individual or group was then asked to answer an Open-ended Scientific Argumentation Test (OSAT). Discussions during group argumentations were observed and recorded. All the answers provided in the OSAT were then analysed based on their accuracy, the triplet relationship in chemistry and for the presence of argumentation elements. Observations from the group argumentations were transcribed and assessed. Findings - The results show that in both argumentative conditions, most of the arguments constructed tend to consist of the elements of claim and evidence. The results also show that students who work in groups outperform students who work individually. As individuals, most of the arguments presented tend to be simple with reasoning at a macro-level. As groups, the arguments presented are more complex, where justifications are provided at the sub-micro and symbolic levels, and with fewer misconceptions. That is because group argumentation participants have the opportunity to share ideas, detect and correct each other's mistakes, seek explanations and explain ideas. Significance - The study implies that group argumentation enhances students' argumentation and reasoning skills and improves their mastery of scientific concepts. In addition, this study also investigates students' performance from the Malaysian perspective. Elsevier B.V. 2015 Article PeerReviewed Heng, Lee Ling and Surif, Johari and Seng, Cher Hau and Ibrahim, Nor Hasniza (2015) Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective. Malaysian Journal of Learning & Instruction, 12 . pp. 85-101. ISSN 1675-8110 http://dx.doi.org/10.32890/mjli2015.12.5
institution Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
building UTM Library
collection Institutional Repository
continent Asia
country Malaysia
content_provider Universiti Teknologi Malaysia
content_source UTM Institutional Repository
url_provider http://eprints.utm.my/
topic H Social Sciences (General)
spellingShingle H Social Sciences (General)
Heng, Lee Ling
Surif, Johari
Seng, Cher Hau
Ibrahim, Nor Hasniza
Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective
description Purpose - Argumentative practices are central to science education, and have recently been emphasised to promote students' reasoning skills and to develop student's understanding of scientific concepts. This study examines the mastery of scientific argumentation, based on the concept of neutralisation, among secondary level science students, when engaged in individual and group argumentations. Methodology - 356 form four science students were first randomly assigned to an argumentative condition, after their lesson on acids and bases, presented using the developed instructional materials. Each individual or group was then asked to answer an Open-ended Scientific Argumentation Test (OSAT). Discussions during group argumentations were observed and recorded. All the answers provided in the OSAT were then analysed based on their accuracy, the triplet relationship in chemistry and for the presence of argumentation elements. Observations from the group argumentations were transcribed and assessed. Findings - The results show that in both argumentative conditions, most of the arguments constructed tend to consist of the elements of claim and evidence. The results also show that students who work in groups outperform students who work individually. As individuals, most of the arguments presented tend to be simple with reasoning at a macro-level. As groups, the arguments presented are more complex, where justifications are provided at the sub-micro and symbolic levels, and with fewer misconceptions. That is because group argumentation participants have the opportunity to share ideas, detect and correct each other's mistakes, seek explanations and explain ideas. Significance - The study implies that group argumentation enhances students' argumentation and reasoning skills and improves their mastery of scientific concepts. In addition, this study also investigates students' performance from the Malaysian perspective.
format Article
author Heng, Lee Ling
Surif, Johari
Seng, Cher Hau
Ibrahim, Nor Hasniza
author_facet Heng, Lee Ling
Surif, Johari
Seng, Cher Hau
Ibrahim, Nor Hasniza
author_sort Heng, Lee Ling
title Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective
title_short Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective
title_full Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective
title_fullStr Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective
title_full_unstemmed Mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: A Malaysian perspective
title_sort mastery of scientific argumentation on the concept of neuralization on chemistry: a malaysian perspective
publisher Elsevier B.V.
publishDate 2015
url http://eprints.utm.my/id/eprint/58504/
http://dx.doi.org/10.32890/mjli2015.12.5
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