International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education (Oct 2012)

The Role of CLEAR Thinking in Learning Science from Multiple-Document Inquiry Tasks

  • Thomas D. GRIFFIN,
  • Jennifer WILEY,
  • M. Anne BRITT,
  • Carlos R. SALAS

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
pp. 63 – 78

Abstract

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The main goal for the current study was to investigate whether individual differences in domaingeneral thinking dispositions might affect learning from multiple-document inquiry tasks in science.Middle school students were given a set of documents and were tasked with understanding how and why recent patterns in global temperature might be different from what has been observed in the past from those documents. Understanding was assessed with two measures: an essay task and an inference verification task. Domain-general thinking dispositions were assessed with a Commitment to Logic, Evidence, and Reasoning (CLEAR) thinking scale. The measures of understanding wereuniquely predicted by both reading skills and CLEAR thinking scores, and these effects were not attributable to prior knowledge or interest. The results suggest independent roles for thinkingdispositions and reading ability when students read to learn from multiple-document inquiry tasks in science.

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