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The Effects of Dichotomous Attitudes toward Science on Interest and Conceptual Understanding in Physics

Cited 6 time in Web of Science Cited 14 time in Scopus
Authors

Kim, Minkee; Song, Jinwoong

Issue Date
2009-11
Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Citation
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF SCIENCE EDUCATION, Vol.31 No.17, pp.2385-2406
Abstract
The literature on students' attitudinal constructs in science education asserts that students hold dichotomous attitudes toward science (AS). For instance, studies from the Relevance of Science Education project reveal that students possess negative attitudes in terms of their favourableness toward school science, preference toward scientific careers, and emotional states toward science (negative intrinsic AS), despite their positive perception that science is important for society (positive extrinsic AS). The issue demands in-depth examination, since not enough science educators have studied the effects of the dichotomous AS on science education. Rather, they have attempted to improve the uncategorised AS for stimulating student achievement in science education. Hence, the aim of this study is to clarify how the dichotomous attitude (intrinsic AS and extrinsic AS) relates to the two educational products in science: interest inventory and conceptual understanding. One hundred and sixteen physics learners in Japan were sampled for fitting the structural equation model in this study. Our final model validated by LISREL suggests that intrinsic AS exclusively stimulate students' interest and conceptual understanding in physics, while extrinsic AS fail to play their expected role. Finally, features of the sampled 10th-graders and their dichotomous AS are further interpreted with the prevalent concept of the hidden curriculum.
ISSN
0950-0693
URI
https://hdl.handle.net/10371/208212
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1080/09500690802563316
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  • College of Education
  • Department of Physics Education
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