14 results on '"Brady Michael Jack"'
Search Results
2. Ecological Stimuli Predicting High School Students' Genuine Interest in Socio-Scientific Issues
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Brady Michael Jack, Zuway-R. Hong, Huann-shyang Lin, and Thomas J. Smith
- Abstract
Existing literature attests to the importance of assessing the learning enjoyment and learning interest of students toward socio-scientific issues (SSI). However, there are few existing studies that examine how ecological stimuli, which are crucial to young learners' perceptual development and the shaping of ethical judgment, predict their learning enjoyment and learning interest in SSI. This investigation addresses this gap in the available literature by investigating and assessing the effects of self-perceived influences of three ecological stimuli constructs--textbooks, family/classmates, and news media--on a learning interest in SSI construct and a learning enjoyment from SSI construct among Taiwanese high school students. A structural equation model consisting of these five constructs was fitted to data collected from 966 students. Results show that influence on students' ethical judgments from textbooks and news media directly predict learning interest in SSI, with effects partially mediated by learning enjoyment from SSI. The influence of family/classmates on students' learning interest was fully mediated by learning enjoyment. The role of enjoyment and learning interest as predictors of these outcomes is discussed within the context of genuine interest in learning SSI content. The value and implications of these results for science education specialists and interest researchers are forwarded and suggested directions of future investigation submitted.
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- 2024
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3. Validating Dewey’s Notion of Genuine Interest
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Thomas J. Smith, Brady Michael Jack, and Chi-Chen Chen
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05 social sciences ,Perspective (graphical) ,Conceptual model (computer science) ,050401 social sciences methods ,050301 education ,Construct validity ,Context (language use) ,Interpersonal communication ,Education ,Epistemology ,Clinical Psychology ,0504 sociology ,Socio-scientific issues ,Psychology ,0503 education ,General Psychology - Abstract
This investigation (1) elucidates genuine interest in the context of learning from Dewey’s perspective, (2) assesses construct validity evidence for a genuine interest conceptual model using data from the Factors Effecting Ethics Learning survey, and (3) assesses measurement invariance of the genuine interest constructs between male ( n = 352) and female ( n = 188) Taiwan high school students. Results provide support for genuine interest as a two-dimensional construct. Second-order factor analysis shows that latent variables of genuine interest in learning socio-scientific issues and interpersonal communication ethics-related issues are represented by sub-latent constructs of learning interest and learning enjoyment. Assessment of gender invariance in the conceptual model provides evidence of measurement equivalence.
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- 2020
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4. Antecedent factors influencing ethics-related social and socio-scientific learning enjoyment
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Chun-Yen Tsai and Brady Michael Jack
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Science instruction ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Science education ,Moral education ,Education ,Antecedent (grammar) ,Personality ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,Socio-scientific issues ,Science learning ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Social psychology ,News media ,050104 developmental & child psychology ,media_common - Abstract
This study investigates how affective dispositions influencing students’ moral judgments can both shape their response to individual enjoyment from learning ethics (IE-LE) and predict their individ...
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- 2019
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5. Making learning interesting and its application to the science classroom
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Brady Michael Jack and Huann-shyang Lin
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scoping study ,Teaching method ,05 social sciences ,nature of interest ,050301 education ,make learning interesting ,Scoping study ,Affect (psychology) ,Learning sciences ,Education ,Affect ,03 medical and health sciences ,secondary science education ,0302 clinical medicine ,Empirical research ,Formal education ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Active listening ,inquiry ,030212 general & internal medicine ,Science learning ,Psychology ,0503 education - Abstract
Generations of students are graduating from secondary school disinterested in post-secondary study of science or pursuing careers in science-related fields beyond formal education. We propose that destabilising such disinterest among future students requires science educators to begin listening to secondary school students regarding their views of how science learning is made interesting within the science classroom. Studies on students’ interest in response to instructional strategies applied in the classroom communicate the opinions (i.e. the ‘voice’) of students about the strategies they believe make their classroom learning interesting. To this end, this scoping study (1) collects empirical studies that present from various science and non-science academic domains students’ views about how to make classroom learning interesting; (2) identifies common instructional strategies across these domains that make learning interesting; and (3) forwards an instructional framework called TEDI ([T]ransdisciplinary Connections; Mediated [E]ngagement; Meaningful [D]iscovery; and Self-determined [I]nquiry), which may provide secondary school science teachers with a practical instructional approach for making learning science genuinely interesting among their students within the secondary school science classroom context.
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- 2017
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6. Warning! Increases in interest without enjoyment may not be trend predictive of genuine interest in learning science
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Brady Michael Jack and Huann-shyang Lin
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Affective factors ,Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,05 social sciences ,Applied psychology ,050301 education ,050109 social psychology ,Science enjoyment ,Development ,Environmental education ,Genuine interest ,Learning sciences ,Education ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,business ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Scientific competency - Abstract
Utilizing PISA 2006/2015 datasets for Japan and Taiwan, the multi-group analysis results show significant predictive increases in science interest and scientific competency, and for science interest and environmental awareness; however, revealed significant predictive decreases for science enjoyment and scientific competency, and for science enjoyment and environmental awareness between PISA cycles for both countries. Results signal divergent predictive trends regarding how interest and enjoyment impact students’ scientific competency, which may reflect instructional approaches that impede students from experiencing genuine interest in learning science. Why these results should sound an alarm to science and environment educators and policy makers is also forwarded.
- Published
- 2018
7. Igniting and Sustaining Interest Among Students Who Have Grown Cold Toward Science
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Brady Michael Jack and Huann-shyang Lin
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Operationalization ,History and Philosophy of Science ,Information and Communications Technology ,Teaching method ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Mathematics education ,Context (language use) ,Social science education ,Sociology ,Science, technology, society and environment education ,Science education ,Learning sciences ,Education - Abstract
In the wake of interest-study research in science education over the past 10 years, investigators have published many articles on how to define, measure, and develop students’ interest in learning science. This present study approaches empirical investigations on students’ interest in learning science from a different perspective. We argue that when three specific instructional strategies are combined, they form the Interest Combustion Triangle (ICT), which ignites and sustains interest in learning science among students who have grown cold toward science content. A future research agenda proposing a newly modified instructional strategy called the K-W-L2-R Strategy Tool for providing science teachers and research investigators with a practical method for operationalizing and testing the ICT within the classroom context is also proposed.
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- 2014
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8. The synergistic effect of affective factors on student learning outcomes
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Brady Michael Jack, Huann-shyang Lin, and Larry D. Yore
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Self-efficacy ,business.industry ,Self-concept ,Standardized test ,Social science education ,Science education ,Education ,Environmental education ,Mathematics education ,Science, technology, society and environment education ,Psychology ,business ,Social psychology ,Social responsibility - Abstract
This study investigates how affective and self-related factors impact participation in science learning and environmental awareness and responsibility. Using PISA 2006 datasets from Taiwan and Canada having similar level of science competency, the model for this study verifies and expands an earlier model by examining the relationships among science-related interest, enjoyment, self-efficacy, self-concept, leisure time engagement, and future intended interest in science and how these relationships synergistically interact with environmental awareness and responsibility. The most consistent finding revealed that students' science self-concept in both groups was weakly associated with future intended interest and engagement in science learning and with their sense of environmental awareness and responsibility. Reasons for this phenomenon and possible causes underlying why students' science self-concept was weakly connected to their future intended interest in science learning are also presented. Finally, how the results of this study are important to science education instruction and research are forwarded in which students' identity and beliefs about self in science need to part of the next generation of science education reforms. © 2014 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. J Res Sci Teach 51: 1084–1101, 2014
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- 2014
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9. A science for citizenship model: Assessing the effects of benefits, risks, and trust for predicting students’ interest in and understanding of science-related content
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Brady Michael Jack, Kuay-Keng Yang, Huann-shyang Lin, and Ling Lee
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Emerging technologies ,media_common.quotation_subject ,05 social sciences ,050301 education ,Social science education ,Secondary education ,050905 science studies ,Science education ,Structural equation modeling ,Learning sciences ,Education ,Risk inclination ,Presentation ,Emerging technology ,Mathematics education ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Interest ,Science for citizenship ,0509 other social sciences ,Science, technology, society and environment education ,Psychology ,0503 education ,Citizenship ,media_common - Abstract
This study showcases the Science for Citizenship Model (SCM) as a new instructional methodology for presenting, to secondary students, science-related technology content related to the use of science in society not taught in the science curriculum, and a new approach for assessing the intercorrelations among three independent variables (benefits, risks, and trust) to predict the dependent variable of triggered interest in learning science. Utilizing a 50-minute instructional presentation on nanotechnology for citizenship, data were collected from 301 Taiwanese high school students. Structural equation modeling (SEM) and paired-samples t-tests were used to analyze the fitness of data to SCM and the extent to which a 50-minute class presentation of nanotechnology for citizenship affected students’ awareness of benefits, risks, trust, and triggered interest in learning science. Results of SCM on pre-tests and post-tests revealed acceptable model fit to data and demonstrated that the strongest predictor of students’ triggered interest in nanotechnology was their trust in science. Paired-samples t-test results on students’ understanding of nanotechnology and their self-evaluated awareness of the benefits and risks of nanotechology, trust in scientists, and interest in learning science revealed low significant differences between pre-test and post-test. These results provide evidence that a short 50-minute presentation on an emerging science not normally addressed within traditional science curriculum had a significant yet limited impact on students’ learning of nanotechnology in the classroom. Finally, we suggest why the results of this study may be important to science education instruction and research for understanding how the integration into classroom science education of short presentations of cutting-edge science and emerging technologies in support of the science for citizenship enterprise might be accomplished through future investigations.
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- 2017
10. Effects of Exposure to Pseudoscientific Television Programs upon Taiwanese Citizens' Pseudoscientific Beliefs
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Tai-Chu Huang, Chun-Yen Tsai, David Chao, Chia-Ju Liu, Houn-Lin Chiu, Paichi Pat Shein, Brady Michael Jack, Ching-Yang Chou, Kun-Chang Wu, Jeng-Fung Hung, and Yuh-Yih Wu
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Television viewing ,business.industry ,Communication ,Paranormal ,Pseudoscience ,Public opinion ,Education ,Likert scale ,Scientific literacy ,Survey data collection ,Psychology ,business ,Social psychology ,Mass media - Abstract
This study investigated the effects of exposure to pseudoscientific television (TV) programs upon Taiwanese citizens' pseudoscientific beliefs. The beliefs and practices of pseudoscience portrayed in the media may misguide the citizens in making life choices that may lead to negative consequences. Participants of this study included 2,024 individuals who were selected using probability proportional to size sampling method. Interviews were conducted and survey data were quantitatively analyzed by means of stepwise multiple regressions and reported with the use of cross tables. Results revealed exposure to pseudoscientific TV programs as a strong predictor of Taiwanese citizens' pseudoscientific beliefs and that younger citizens demonstrate more pseudoscientific beliefs and practices than older citizens. Researchers of this study proposed the need for making better use of mass media as a way to educate citizens about science and reduce pseudoscientific beliefs.
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- 2012
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11. Using the Cognitive Apprenticeship Web-based Argumentation System to Improve Argumentation Instruction
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Chun-Yen Tsai, Brady Michael Jack, Tai-Chu Huang, and Jin-Tan Yang
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business.industry ,Computer science ,Teaching method ,General Engineering ,Educational technology ,Science education ,Education ,Argumentation theory ,Pedagogy ,ComputingMilieux_COMPUTERSANDEDUCATION ,Mathematics education ,Cognitive apprenticeship ,Web application ,The Internet ,Apprenticeship ,business - Abstract
This study investigated how the instruction of argumentation skills could be promoted by using an online argumentation system. This system entitled ‘Cognitive Apprenticeship Web-based Argumentation’ (CAWA) system was based on cognitive apprenticeship model. One hundred eighty-nine fifth grade students took part in this study. A quasi-experimental design was adopted and qualitative and quantitative analyses were used to evaluate the effectiveness of this online system in measuring students’ progress in learning argumentation. The results of this study showed that different teaching strategies had effects on students’ use of argumentation in the topics of daily life and the concept of ‘vision.’ When the CAWA system was employed during the instruction and practice of argumentation on these two topics, the students’ argumentation performance improved. Suggestions on how the CAWA system could be used to enhance the instruction of argumentation skills in science education were also discussed.
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- 2011
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12. MEASURING THE CONFIDENCE OF 8TH GRADE TAIWANESE STUDENTS’ KNOWLEDGE OF ACIDS AND BASES
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Brady Michael Jack, Chia-Ju Liu, Houn-Lin Chiu, and Chun-Yen Tsai
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Correlation ,Science instruction ,General Mathematics ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Respondent ,Self-esteem ,Psychology ,Rating score ,Education ,Developmental psychology ,media_common ,Test (assessment) - Abstract
The present study investigated whether gender differences were present on the confidence judgments made by 8th grade Taiwanese students on the accuracy of their responses to acid–base test items. A total of 147 (76 male, 71 female) students provided item-specific confidence judgments during a test of their knowledge of acids and bases. Using the correctness of the answer responses, a confidence rating score, an unweighted rating score, and a relative confidence rating score were calculated for each respondent. The correlations between the boys and girls for each score area showed girls as scoring higher than boys in their knowledge of acids and bases, were more confident in this knowledge, and more willing to express different levels of confidence among the test items.
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- 2011
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13. Effects of self-evaluated value and cognition on leisure science engagement
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Brady Michael Jack, Hsiao-Ching She, and Huann-shyang Lin
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Self-efficacy ,Communication ,Knowledge level ,05 social sciences ,education ,Primary education ,050301 education ,Cognition ,050905 science studies ,Science education ,science self-concept ,Education ,Likert scale ,Leisure engagement ,Value judgment ,science self-efficacy ,Mathematics education ,Achievement test ,value of science ,0509 other social sciences ,Psychology ,0503 education - Abstract
This study uses the Taiwan Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2006 Main Survey and Taiwan PISA 2015 Field Trial survey datasets to investigate how self-evaluated values (i.e. personal and general) and cognitive factors (i.e. self-efficacy and self-concept) of two groups of Taiwanese 15-year-old students separated by 8 years of classroom-presented science instruction experience impact leisure engagement in science learning activities. To compare differences between these two groups, we verified the statistical fitness of a newly created five-factor model called the self-evaluated values and cognition, and engagement, which revealed a good model fit to both PISA datasets. Results from critical ratio for differences analyses showed a significant increase in pathway parameter strength for students’ personal value of science, and a significant decrease in pathway parameter strength for students’ science self-efficacy between the two PISA survey cycles. Examination of results and their importance for science educators, investigators, and policy-makers is also offered.
- Published
- 2016
14. TAIWAN ELEMENTARY TEACHERS’ VIEWS OF SCIENCE TEACHING SELF-EFFICACY AND OUTCOME EXPECTATIONS
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Houn-Lin Chiu, Brady Michael Jack, and Chia-Ju Liu
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Self-efficacy ,Multivariate analysis of variance ,General Mathematics ,Science teaching ,Mathematics education ,Developing country ,Context (language use) ,Psychology ,Outcome (game theory) ,Science education ,Teacher education ,Education - Abstract
This paper presents the results of a case study involving 282 Taiwanese elementary science teachers at the elementary level. These teachers provided responses to the science efficacy instrument (STEBI-A) and also provided personal data regarding how their years of general (YTE) and science (YTS) teaching experience may have influenced student achievement in science. Researchers used two multivariate analysis of variance (MANOVA) to investigate the interaction and influence of YTE and YTS upon the personal science teaching efficacy (PSTE) and science teaching outcome expectations (STOE) of these teachers. The results advocate the position that the years of general teaching experience of elementary science teachers in Taiwan have a significantly greater impact upon their personal science teaching efficacy and science teaching outcome expectations than years of teaching science. This evidence calls into question whether Bandura and Tschannen-Moran’s view of teacher efficacy as both context and subject matter specific at the elementary level can be applied to Taiwan elementary teachers who teach science. The results of this study should benefit educators and policy-makers with respect to future elementary teacher education throughout Taiwan and other developing nations.
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- 2008
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