Abstract

The aim of the current study is to investigate student biology teachers’ cognitive structures related to through the free word-association test and the drawing-writing technique. As the research design of the study, the qualitative research method was applied. The data were collected from 44 student biology teachers. The free word-association test and the drawing-writing technique were used as data collection instruments. The data were subject to content analysis and divided into categories through coding. In the analysis, the categories were formed and determined through the results of word-association test and drawing-writing test which were completed by the student biology teachers. With the help of these categories, the cognitive structures of student biology teachers were explained. The data collected through the study were divided into 8 categories (defining diffusion, diffusion environments, diffusion-forms of substance transfer, places and structures where diffusion occurs, substances in diffusion and their characteristics, importance of diffusion in plants, examples of diffusion and factors influencing diffusion speed). The common and dominant category in both assessment instruments is “defining diffusion”. On the other hand, it was determined that student biology teachers had alternative concepts related to diffusion. At the end of the article, comprehensive suggestions are presented on the subject.

Highlights

  • Learning occurs as a result of an interaction between what the student learns and the concepts already existing in her mind (Posner, Strike, Hewson & Gertzog, 1982)

  • The aim of the current study is to investigate student biology teachers’ cognitive structures related to "diffusion" through the free word-association test and the drawing-writing technique

  • The following five categories were produced in the drawing technique: defining diffusion (23), substances in diffusion and their characteristics (10), examples of diffusion (7), places and structures where diffusion occurs (6) and diffusion environments (4); and the following four categories were produced in the writing technique defining diffusion (14), factors influencing diffusion speed (4), substances in diffusion and their characteristics (2) and places and structures where diffusion occurs (2) (Table 3)

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Summary

Introduction

Learning occurs as a result of an interaction between what the student learns and the concepts already existing in her mind (Posner, Strike, Hewson & Gertzog, 1982). Otherwise, learning cannot be realized (Bahar, Johnstone & Hansell, 1999; Cimer, 2012; Jones & Rua, 2006; Lukin, 2013; Lazarowitz & Penso, 1992; Prokop, Prokop, Tunnicliffe & Diran, 2007; Seymour & Longdon, 1991; Simpson & Marek, 1988; Udovic, Morris, Dickman, Postlethwait & Wetherwax, 2002; Treagust, 1988) For this reason, Biology is among the courses in which students struggle to learn; due to their failure in comprehending the unity at the level of biological organization, in understanding the micro and macro level relations among concepts, and in making sense of abstract subjects. They struggle to learn those concepts that point to the micro and macro relations inherent in biological events

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