Elizabeth B. Lewis
University of Nebraska–Lincoln
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Featured researches published by Elizabeth B. Lewis.
International Journal of Science Education | 2008
Douglas B. Clark; Stephen J. Reynolds; Vivian Lemanowski; Thomas Stiles; Senay Yasar; Sian Proctor; Elizabeth B. Lewis; Charlotte Stromfors; James Corkins
This study investigates the strategies and assumptions that college students entering an introductory physical geology laboratory use to interpret topographic maps, and follows the progress of the students during the laboratory to analyze changes in those strategies and assumptions. To elicit students’ strategies and assumptions, we created and refined a topographic visualization test that was administered before and after instruction to 26 students during the first semester of the study and to 92 students during the second semester. To more deeply understand how students think about and conceptualize topographic maps, we focused on eight individual students who were interviewed about their pretest and posttest answers as well as videotaped during three laboratory sessions. We found that even students who claim never to have worked with topographic maps often perform impressively on their pretests by making useful assumptions about symbolic topographic information. Some students, however, begin with less productive assumptions that may be unfamiliar to some instructors (e.g., thinking that the spacing of contour lines indicates elevation instead of slope). Initial success should not be misinterpreted, however, as an integrated understanding of topographic maps. Only in posttest interviews do most students express explanations integrating multiple normative assumptions. In addition to highlighting the strategies and assumptions that college students use to interpret topographic maps, we outline the implications of these findings for the design of learning objectives, curricular activities, and assessments for topographic lessons in introductory college geology courses and the training of future geoscientists.
Professional Development in Education | 2011
Dale R. Baker; Elizabeth B. Lewis; Sibel Uysal; Senay Purzer; Michael Lang; Perry Baker
This study describes the effect of embedding content in the Communication in Inquiry Science Project professional development model for science and language arts teachers. The model uses four components of successful professional development (content focus, active learning, extended duration, participation by teams of teachers from the same school or grade level) and instructional strategies for inquiry, academic language development, written and oral discourse, and learning principles as components of science activities. Teachers were given a pre/post‐institute genetics assessment. There was a statistically significant increase in scores for the entire sample and a statistically significant difference between science and language arts pre and post scores, with science teachers scoring higher in both cases.
Journal of Research in Science Teaching | 2009
Elizabeth B. Lewis; Dale R. Baker
International journal of environmental and science education | 2009
Dale R. Baker; Elizabeth B. Lewis; Senay Purzer; Nievita Bueno Watts; Gita Perkins; Sibel Uysal; Sissy S. Wong; Rachelle Beard; Michael Lang
Journal of geoscience education | 2008
Elizabeth B. Lewis
International Journal of Science Education | 2011
Elizabeth B. Lewis; Katrien J. van der Hoeven Kraft; Nievita Bueno Watts; Dale R. Baker; Meredith J. Wilson; Michael Lang
Science Education | 2015
Elizabeth B. Lewis; Dale R. Baker; Brandon Helding
School Science and Mathematics | 2014
Elizabeth B. Lewis; Oxana Dema; Dena Harshbarger
Science Educator | 2014
Elizabeth B. Lewis; Dale R. Baker; Nievita Bueno Watts; Michael Lang
Archive | 2010
Elizabeth B. Lewis; Dale R. Baker