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Document Description
Title
Role-play
as an
instructional
method
in
grade
seven
science
classes
:
a
case
study
Author
Coombes
,
Greg.
Description
Thesis
(M.Ed.)
--
Memorial
University
of
Newfoundland
,
1989.
Education
Date
1989
Pagination
vii, 173 leaves
Subject
Role
playing--Case
studies;
Science--Study
and
teaching
(Secondary)--Newfoundland
and
Labrador;
Degree
M.Ed.
Degree Grantor
Memorial University of Newfoundland. Faculty of Education
Discipline
Education
Language
Eng
Spatial Coverage
Canada--Newfoundland and Labrador
Notes
Bibliography:
leaves
162-173.
Abstract
A
wide
body
of
scholarly
research
reports
that
teachers
consistently
choose
from a
narrow
repertoire
of
strategies
in their
teaching.
This
study
attempted
to
broaden
teacher
repertoire
directly
,
assessing
teacher
and
student
response
to a
new
teaching
method
,
role-play
,
while
monitoring
its
implementation.
Role-play
was
chosen
as a
suitable
model
because
it
is
student-centered
, has a
history
of
educational
use
and
is
rarely
encountered
in
science
curricula.
The
investigation
covered
the
full
range
of
curriculum
development
,
using
a
case
study
approach.
A
series
of
pilot
studies
in
five
classes
over
six
months
led
to a
curriculum
package
which
was
used
in
seventeen
classes.
This
package
consisted
of a
thirty-page
role-play
scenario
with
role
briefs
for
student
use
plus
guidelines
and
background
for the
teacher.
The
role-play
concerns
a
town
council
debate
over
a
proposed
mine
in an
ecologically
sensitive
area.
It
requires
two
class
periods.
The
material
is
suitable
as a
science-technology-society
exercise
for any
secondary
science
class.
Teachers
attended
a
two-hour
workshop
about
the
teaching
method.
A
total
of
fourteen
teachers
used
the
final
package
with
four
hundred
and
seventy-eight
students.
These
classes
were
all
at the
Grade
Seven
level
, in
rural
and
urban
schools.
Students
completed
questionnaires
before
and
after
the
role-play.
The
questionnaires
assessed
their
attitudes
to
science
and
science
teaching
methods
through
Likert
type
and
open-ended
questions.
Student
responses
to the
Likert
items
were
tabulated
and
examined
for
correlations
with
teacher
responses.
No
significant
differences
were
found
among
the
classes.
Student
responses
demonstrated
clear
and
consistent
attitudes
about
their
science
classes.
This
included
a
dislike
of
seatwork
and
teacher
talk
and a
strong
liking
for
field
trips
and
laboratory
work.
Student
responses
on the
open-ended
questions
were
categorized.
Representative
comments
were
chosen
to
illustrate
the
range
of
student
feelings
about
their
science
classes
and their
reactions
to the
role-play.
The
comments
support
the
positions
indicated
by the
Likert
responses.
In
addition
, they
reveal
deep
student
support
for their
active
participation
in the
classroom.
The
role-plays
were
videotaped
and
analyzed
using
a
rating
scale.
The
rating
scale
had an
interrater
reliability
of
eighty-eight
per
cent.
Teacher
implementation
of the
role-play
model
, as
might
be
expected
for a
first
effort
,
varied
over
the
wide
range
of
twenty
to
eighty
per
cent.
The
study
showed
the
feasibility
of
using
role-playing
classes
in
Junior
High
Science
and the
role-play's
influence
on
affective
learning
of a
large
group
of
students.
An
important
secondary
finding
was that
teachers
showed
a
wide
range
of
implementation
of the
teaching
technique.
All
teachers
and
ninety-six
per
cent
of
students
expressed
strong
support
of the
exercise.
Type
Text
Resource Type
Electronic
thesis
or
dissertation
Format
Image/jpeg;
Application/pdf
Source
Paper copy kept in the Centre for Newfoundland Studies, Memorial University Libraries
Local Identifier
76039435
Rights
The author retains copyright ownership and moral rights in this thesis. Neither the thesis nor substantial extracts from it may be printed or otherwise reproduced without the author's permission.
Collection
Electronic
Theses
and
Dissertations
Scanning Status
Completed
PDF File
(18.65
MB)
--
http://collections.mun.ca/PDFs/theses/Coombes_Greg.pdf
CONTENTdm file name
12020.cpd