Rachel E. Wilson
Appalachian State University
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Featured researches published by Rachel E. Wilson.
Journal of Science Teacher Education | 2015
Rachel E. Wilson; Leslie Bradbury; Martha A. McGlasson
The purpose of this article is to explore how preservice elementary teachers (PSETs) interpreted their service-learning experiences within a pre-methods environmentally focused course and how their interpretations shaped their science teaching identities. Along a continuum of service-learning experiences were events that emphasized science learning, that focused on science teaching, and that were transitional, with elements of both science learning and science teaching. These various service-learning experiences were designed to be “boundary experiences” for professional identity development (Geijsel & Meijers in Educational Studies, 3(4), 419–430, 2005), providing opportunities for PSETs to reflect on meanings in cultural contexts and how they are related to their own personal meanings. We analyzed written reflections and end-of-course oral reflection interviews from 42 PSETs on their various service-learning experiences. PSETs discussed themes related to the meanings they made of the service-learning experiences: (a) experiencing science in relation to their lives as humans and future teachers, (b) interacting with elementary students and other PSETs, and (c) making an impact in the physical environment and in the community. The connections that PSETs were making between the discursive spaces (service-learning contexts) and their own meaning-making of these experiences (as connected to their own interests in relation to their future professions and daily lives) shows evidence of the potential that various types of science service-learning experiences have for PSETs in developing inbound science teaching identity trajectories (Wenger in Communities of practice: Learning, meaning, and identity. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1998). The findings of this study point to positive outcomes for PSETs when they participate in structured service-learning experiences along a learning to teaching continuum (246).
International Journal of Science Education | 2016
Rachel E. Wilson; Leslie Bradbury
ABSTRACT In consideration of the potential of drawing and writing as assessment and learning tools, we explored how early primary students used these modes to communicate their science understandings. The context for this study was a curricular unit that incorporated multiple modes of representation in both the presentation of information and production of student understanding with a focus on the structure and function of carnivorous plants (CPs). Two science teacher educators and two first-grade teachers in the United States co-planned and co-taught a multimodal science unit on CP structure and function that included multiple representations of Venus flytraps (VFTs): physical specimens, photographs, videos, text, and discussions. Pre- and post-assessment student drawings and writings were statistically compared to note significant changes, and pre- and post-assessment writings were qualitatively analysed to note themes in student ideas. Results indicate that students increased their knowledge of VFT structure and function and synthesised information from multiple modes. While students included more structures of the VFT in their drawings, they were better able to describe the functions of structures in their writings. These results suggest the benefits for student learning and assessment of having early primary students represent their science understandings in multiple modes.
International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education | 2015
Rachel E. Wilson
I argue that Ricoeur’s preunderstandings can be used as a heuristic to aid researchers who collect narratives as data (1) to identify cultural meanings that become resources for participants’ positioning work, (2) to ground the identified cultural meanings in participants’ experiences, and (3) to understand participants’ interpretations of constraint and agency within that context. I outline how the philosophical hermeneutics of Ricoeur is consistent with a sociocultural perspective on positioning and identity, as well as present data analysis questions developed from Ricoeur’s ideas of narrative configuration to explore common cultural meanings used by participants in interpreting their lived experience. These questions provide a strategy to examine how participants may be referring to common cultural meanings but their individual interpretations of these meanings can have different implications for their feelings of agency.
Journal of Research in Science Teaching | 2013
Rachel E. Wilson; Julie M. Kittleson
Contemporary Issues in Technology and Teacher Education | 2013
Rachel E. Wilson; Jeff Goodman; Leslie Bradbury; Lisa A. Gross
Research in Science Education | 2017
Leslie Bradbury; Rachel E. Wilson; Laura E. Brookshire
Science and Children | 2016
Leslie Bradbury; Rachel E. Wilson; Nancy Pepper; Mitzi Ledford
Cultural Studies of Science Education | 2014
Julie M. Kittleson; Rachel E. Wilson
Science and Children | 2016
Rachel E. Wilson; Leslie Bradbury
Science and Children | 2016
Leslie Bradbury; Rachel E. Wilson; Nancy Pepper; Mitzi Ledford