2013
DOI: 10.1080/03057267.2013.801119
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Collaborative and self-generated analogies in science education

Abstract: It has long been recognised that analogies may be a useful tool in science education. At the same time, it has been found that there are challenges to using analogies in teaching. For example, students might not identify a suitable analogy, might not recognise how the taught target domain is similar to the source domain to which it is compared, or may fail to realise where the analogy breaks down. The present study offers a review of two trends which reflect the ambition to come to terms with such challenges: … Show more

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Cited by 31 publications
(36 citation statements)
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References 97 publications
(154 reference statements)
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“…analogies the teachers used, because this aspect of their utterances emerged as a dominant feature of how they described the influence of neuroscience on their learning and pedagogical decisionmaking processes. Analogies have been reported to promote learning, where new or abstract concepts are made more concrete, accessible, and retrievable (Nashon 2004, Haglund 2013, Burdina and Sauer 2015.…”
Section: Attention and Awarenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…analogies the teachers used, because this aspect of their utterances emerged as a dominant feature of how they described the influence of neuroscience on their learning and pedagogical decisionmaking processes. Analogies have been reported to promote learning, where new or abstract concepts are made more concrete, accessible, and retrievable (Nashon 2004, Haglund 2013, Burdina and Sauer 2015.…”
Section: Attention and Awarenessmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…More recently, the social dimension of generation and scrutiny of analogies in discourse has also received increasing attention (Haglund, 2013). For instance, Aubusson and Fogwill (2006) studied the effect of inviting secondary chemistry students to cooperate in the development of a role play as an analogy of chemical bonds, where the students acted as atoms and ions.…”
Section: Self-generated Analogies As a Tool For Conceptual Understandingmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…While most studies on analogical reasoning in science education have been carried out in the teacher generated mode (Pittman, 1999), an increasing number of studies have adopted the approach of self-generated analogies (Haglund, 2013). For instance, Wong (1993) presented eleven preservice teacher students with a piston/cylinder device and the phenomena that the force required to pull or push the piston increases the further the gas is either compressed or decompressed when the cylinder's nozzle is covered by a finger.…”
Section: Self-generated Analogies As a Tool For Conceptual Understandingmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, the use of metaphors has also been noted to be potentially problematic, for instance if students take the analogy too far (e.g. Haglund, 2013;Danielsson, Löfgren & Pettersson, accepted). An example from chemistry classrooms is the metaphoric use of electronic "shells" when explaining the ways in which electrons move around the nucleus at a certain distance.…”
Section: Model For Working With Multimodal Texts In Educationmentioning
confidence: 99%