Abstract

This study investigated the relationships of teacher-directed approaches with science achievement in Australian schools. The data for this study were drawn from the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2015 database and analysed using multilevel modelling (MLM). MLMs were estimated to test the contribution of each item to students’ science achievement scores and to estimate the mediation effect of teacher explanations on these relationships. Only explicit, teacher-directed practices demonstrated a significant, positive association with science achievement. The positive, significant nature of the item ‘the teacher explains scientific ideas’ (B = 29.61, p < 0.001) suggested that this practice should take place in all science lessons. In the mediation model, the explicit, teacher-directed approaches in the inquiry scale revealed a significant indirect effect on science achievement, through the process of the teacher explaining scientific ideas. This indicated that effective explanations also underpin other instructional approaches such as contextualised science learning. These findings, accompanied by an analysis of the teacher-directed items and their relationships to science outcomes, give teachers and policymakers clear guidance regarding the effective use of instructional explanations in the science classroom.

Highlights

  • This study investigated the relationships of teacher-directed approaches with science achievement in Australian schools

  • Considering the limited body of research regarding Teacher-directed instruction (TDI) in the correlational literature relating to international large-scale assessments (ILSAs), this study investigated the relationships of teacher-led approaches on science achievement using the Program for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2015 dataset

  • We investigated the mediating effect of the teacher explanation item (“the teacher explains scientific ideas”) on the significant, teacher-directed approaches from the inquiry-based instruction scale to explain any associations found between these variables

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Summary

Introduction

This study investigated the relationships of teacher-directed approaches with science achievement in Australian schools. The explicit, teacher-directed approaches in the inquiry scale revealed a significant indirect effect on science achievement, through the process of the teacher explaining scientific ideas. This indicated that effective explanations underpin other instructional approaches such as contextualised science learning. This study intends to address this by exploring the effects of teacher-directed practices (measured as individual items in the student questionnaire) included in the PISA 2015 scaled indexes, and the mediating effects of teacher explanations on any significant relationships found. This is achieved through continuous positive reinforcement (of learning behaviours) and frequent celebrations of student successes (such as progression in the successful acquisition of knowledge and skills; Stockard et al, 2018)

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