Adolescents’ epistemic profiles in the service of knowledge revision
•Refutation texts were designed to present unique dimensions of epistemic justification.•Cluster analysis was performed on adolescents’ epistemic justification beliefs.•Justification by authority, personal opinion, or multiple sources were considered.•Knowledge revision varied by epistemic profiles...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Contemporary educational psychology 2017-04, Vol.49, p.107-120 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | •Refutation texts were designed to present unique dimensions of epistemic justification.•Cluster analysis was performed on adolescents’ epistemic justification beliefs.•Justification by authority, personal opinion, or multiple sources were considered.•Knowledge revision varied by epistemic profiles and refutation texts designs.•Findings show the value of person-centered analyses for epistemic cognition research.
Refutation texts have been previously shown to be effective at promoting knowledge revision. The current study builds on recent trends to gain deeper insights into how this learning advantage can be enhanced and extended to more learners. In particular, we examined whether distinct epistemic profiles can be discerned on the basis of individuals’ beliefs about justification for knowing (i.e., justification by authority, personal opinion, or multiple sources) in the natural sciences. Further, we designed refutation texts according to this trichotomous framework of epistemic justification. We tested whether profiles stronger in certain dimensions would attain higher learning scores over others and whether consistency between profiles and texts would confer a learning advantage compared to when these factors were inconsistent. Results showed that distinct epistemic profiles are discernable and a profile with stronger preference for justification by multiple sources, authority, and lower preference for justification by personal opinion in natural science attained higher learning scores. Further, higher learning scores were observed when refutation texts justified by authoritative explanations were consistent with one cluster dominant in preference for justification by authority. Theoretical and instructional design implications are discussed. |
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ISSN: | 0361-476X 1090-2384 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.cedpsych.2017.01.005 |