Abstract

Covid-19 has significantly impacted children’s lives, requiring them to process multiple messages with significant emotional, social, and behavioural implications. Yet, the vast majority of these messages solely focus on behaviour. This is an oversight as children and young people can understand the biological properties and mechanisms of viruses when supported appropriately, thereby presenting an important opportunity for educators. However, like many other invisible scientific phenomena, understanding of viruses greatly depends upon how they are represented. Thus, we sought to understand the relative benefits and limitations of different forms for learning about the underlying biology of Covid-19. Applying an embodied learning lens, we analysed pictures, 3d models, gestures, dynamic visualisations, interactive representations, and extended reality identified through a state-of-the art-review. In so doing, we address the affordances and limitations of these forms in general and variation within them. We used this to develop a representational checklist that teachers and other adults can use to help them support children and young people’s learning about the biology of Covid-19.

Highlights

  • Covid-19 * has significantly impacted children’s lives within and beyond the classroom, requiring them to process multiple messages that have significant emotional, social and behavioural implications

  • The question underpinning the contribution of this paper is: What are the relative benefits and limitations of different forms of representation for learning about the underlying biology of Covid-19? Our focus is children and young people aged 4–16, for brevity we often use just the term “children.” To address this question, it was first necessary to articulate a framework that could be used to examine these differences, and which informed a state-of-the art review of existing representations of Covid-19

  • 4 CONCLUSION: SUMMARY AND IMPLICATIONS. It was not our intention when writing this paper to reduce the complexity of teaching about Covid-19 to be a solely representational issue

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Covid-19 * has significantly impacted children’s lives within and beyond the classroom, requiring them to process multiple messages that have significant emotional, social and behavioural implications Whilst these messages are predominately focused on health behaviours, we arguably have a responsibility to help children’s understanding of the biology underpinning these messages. The contribution of this paper is to offer a new perspective concerning the support of children’s learning of viruses through a framework informed analysis of representations of Covid-19 and viruses more broadly identified by a state-ofthe-art review. From this analysis, draw implications for education to help teachers in making appropriate representational choices. The question underpinning the contribution of this paper is: What are the relative benefits and limitations of different forms of representations for learning about the underlying biology of Covid-19?

REPRESENTING COVID-19 FOR LEARNING
The Learning Domain
Analytic Review
REPRESENTATIONS OF COVID-19
Physical Representations
Gesture
Dynamic Visualisation
Interactive Visualisations
Extended Reality
SUMMARY AND IMPLICATIONS
Implications for Education
Findings
Conclusion
Full Text
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