Abstract

This study explored how productive disciplinary engagement (PDE) is associated with the level of cognitive activity and collective group outcome in collaborative learning across multiple contexts. Traditionally, PDE has been studied in a single collaborative learning environment, without analysis of how these environments fulfill the supporting conditions for PDE. In addition, research on the quality of a collective learning outcome and product in relation to the extent of the group’s PDE during actual collaborative learning processes is scarce. In this study, the learning processes of low- and high-outcome small groups were compared within three collaborative learning contexts: high school general science, second year university veterinary science, and fourth year university engineering. Two meaningful and self-contained phases from each context were selected for analysis. The same theory-based analytical methods were used across contexts. The findings revealed similar patterns in the high school science and second year university veterinary science data sets, where high-outcome groups displayed a greater proportion of high-level cognitive activity while working on the task. Thus, they could be distinctively perceived as high- and low-performing groups. These high-performing groups’ interactions also reflected more of the supporting conditions associated with PDE than the low-performing groups. An opposite pattern was found in the fourth year university engineering data set, calling for interpretation grounded in the literature on the nature and development of expertise. This study reveals the criticality of using comparable analytical methods across different contexts to enable discrepancies to emerge, thus refining our contextualized understanding of PDE in collaborative science learning.

Highlights

  • Collaborative environments have been widely recommended to support students’ science learning

  • Findings from the systematic analyses of the cognitive activity are presented first, since they serve as a basis for the subsequent productive disciplinary engagement (PDE) analyses

  • The covariate project phase did not significantly correlate with cognitive activity; the covariate site was significant, with high-level cognitive activity significantly increasing from the high school level to the 2nd year university level and to the 4th year university level

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Summary

Introduction

Collaborative environments have been widely recommended to support students’ science learning. When embedded in school science projects the likelihood of students transferring the skills learned at school to professional practice increases (Bransford et al 2000; Johri and Olds 2011; Stevens et al 2008). Such projects are most effective when they are “group-worthy,” where the task is complex enough that each student needs to contribute his or her ideas and to draw from the resources and perspectives of other group members (Horn 2005; Lotan 2003)

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