Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour?

This paper reports on a case study performed in the 3rd cycle of a developmental research, which aims at designing a learning environment with research-informed NetLogo models that could help non-biology major students in challenging the ‘balanced nature’ idea. Our focus is set on whether and how st...

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Λεπτομέρειες βιβλιογραφικής εγγραφής
Κύριοι συγγραφείς: Ampatzidis, Georgios, Ergazaki, Marida
Άλλοι συγγραφείς: Αμπατζίδης, Γεώργιος
Μορφή: Conference (paper)
Γλώσσα:English
Έκδοση: 2018
Θέματα:
Διαθέσιμο Online:https://www.dropbox.com/s/zvzvzm8kzpu58x2/Part_1_eBook.pdf?dl=0
http://hdl.handle.net/10889/11694
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spelling nemertes-10889-116942022-09-05T13:59:49Z Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour? - Ampatzidis, Georgios Ergazaki, Marida Αμπατζίδης, Γεώργιος Εργαζάκη, Μαρίδα ecological reasoning model-based learning resilient nature This paper reports on a case study performed in the 3rd cycle of a developmental research, which aims at designing a learning environment with research-informed NetLogo models that could help non-biology major students in challenging the ‘balanced nature’ idea. Our focus is set on whether and how students’ reasoning about ecosystems’ response to human-driven disturbance or protection altered after their engagement with specially designed models of terrestrial or aquatic ecosystems studied by ecologists. Informed by constructivism and problem-posing approach, our CSCL environment highlights ecosystems’ contingent behaviour through the currently valid idea of the ‘resilient nature’. Forty-four, 1st-year educational sciences students were introduced to the assumptions of this idea in five, 2-hour sessions by exploring in triads our NetLogo models aided by worksheets, which asked for predictions/explanations before/after using the model. Each model had two versions showing two different trajectories of an ecosystem, which were linked to differences in initial conditions or human actions for its recovery. The two different trajectories shown in the two versions of each model were discussed in whole class discussions at the end of the sessions. The analysis of students’ responses to certain items of the pre/post-test showed that the ideas of a protected ecosystem’s stability and a disturbed ecosystem’s full recovery retreated in the post-test, while the idea of ecosystems’ contingent behaviour appeared for the first time in high frequencies. 2018-10-14T09:38:57Z 2018-10-14T09:38:57Z August 2017 Conference (paper) https://www.dropbox.com/s/zvzvzm8kzpu58x2/Part_1_eBook.pdf?dl=0 http://hdl.handle.net/10889/11694 en ESERA 2017 Conference: Research, Practice and Collaboration in Science Education application/pdf
institution UPatras
collection Nemertes
language English
topic ecological reasoning
model-based learning
resilient nature
spellingShingle ecological reasoning
model-based learning
resilient nature
Ampatzidis, Georgios
Ergazaki, Marida
Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour?
description This paper reports on a case study performed in the 3rd cycle of a developmental research, which aims at designing a learning environment with research-informed NetLogo models that could help non-biology major students in challenging the ‘balanced nature’ idea. Our focus is set on whether and how students’ reasoning about ecosystems’ response to human-driven disturbance or protection altered after their engagement with specially designed models of terrestrial or aquatic ecosystems studied by ecologists. Informed by constructivism and problem-posing approach, our CSCL environment highlights ecosystems’ contingent behaviour through the currently valid idea of the ‘resilient nature’. Forty-four, 1st-year educational sciences students were introduced to the assumptions of this idea in five, 2-hour sessions by exploring in triads our NetLogo models aided by worksheets, which asked for predictions/explanations before/after using the model. Each model had two versions showing two different trajectories of an ecosystem, which were linked to differences in initial conditions or human actions for its recovery. The two different trajectories shown in the two versions of each model were discussed in whole class discussions at the end of the sessions. The analysis of students’ responses to certain items of the pre/post-test showed that the ideas of a protected ecosystem’s stability and a disturbed ecosystem’s full recovery retreated in the post-test, while the idea of ecosystems’ contingent behaviour appeared for the first time in high frequencies.
author2 Αμπατζίδης, Γεώργιος
author_facet Αμπατζίδης, Γεώργιος
Ampatzidis, Georgios
Ergazaki, Marida
format Conference (paper)
author Ampatzidis, Georgios
Ergazaki, Marida
author_sort Ampatzidis, Georgios
title Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour?
title_short Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour?
title_full Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour?
title_fullStr Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour?
title_full_unstemmed Can Research-Informed NetLogo Models Promote the Idea of Contingency in Ecosystems' Behaviour?
title_sort can research-informed netlogo models promote the idea of contingency in ecosystems' behaviour?
publishDate 2018
url https://www.dropbox.com/s/zvzvzm8kzpu58x2/Part_1_eBook.pdf?dl=0
http://hdl.handle.net/10889/11694
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