Abstract

It is a generally held view amongst educators today that the development of students’ inference skills is an important aspect in their education as 21st Century learners as it requires higher order cognitive competences. Oftentimes, students in the lower tracks are considered slower learners and may have difficulties with the development of such skills. There is, however, limited empirical evidence to support such claims. As a result, there is a lack of understanding how such skills are taught, and how lower track students acquire them. The purpose of this study is to investigate lower track students’ science inference skills over one academic year, to better understand their learning and development. To determine this, three multiple-choice science inference skills tests were developed based on science syllabus and administered over a 9-month period. In total, 1397 Grade 7 lower track (i.e., Normal Academic) students from 38 Singapore secondary schools participated in the study. The students’ performances were determined through three equated tests using Rasch common-item procedures. The results showed that students experienced greater difficulty with tests over time. They particularly had difficulties with questions pertinent to graphs, tables, diagrams, or charts, or required them to extend their thinking beyond the given information. They also had difficulty in deducing answers using the elimination technique, and items that involved experiments and variables. Items that involved pattern recognition, concluding using range, application of a given concept, and limited information were easier for them. The findings also have implications for science teacher education in terms of assessment literacy, and the science teaching of lower track students.

Highlights

  • In the last two decades, there is greater emphasis on developing diverse learners holistically and equipping them with 21st Century Competencies (21CC)

  • In our study reported in this paper, the analysis did not warrant the removal of any misfitting items or persons

  • The results from the Rasch analyses provided some interesting insights on the quality of the instruments in distinguishing the abilities of the learners, and how well the tests were targeted to the abilities of the cohort of lower track learners

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Summary

Introduction

In the last two decades, there is greater emphasis on developing diverse learners holistically and equipping them with 21st Century Competencies (21CC). Cognitive testing is still the most widely applied form of assessment to understanding student learning in schools—that is, the assessment of students’ cognitive development While this may be true, there is a shift from testing students’ recall of core academic contents taught in the classroom to the mastery of higher-order thinking skills, such as critical thinking, inference skills and lateral thinking skills. These new emphases could enable educators to understand and contribute positively to the development of knowledge, skills and dispositions for student learning beyond the classroom (Bachen, Hernández-Ramos, & Raphael, 2012; Black & Wiliam, 1998; Boud & Falchikov, 2006; Koenig, 2011; Shepard et al, 2005; Soland et al, 2013 Stiggins, 2002)

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