Universal Design for Learning and Elementary School Science: Exploring the Efficacy, Use, and Perceptions of a Web-Based Science Notebook
ARTICLE
Gabrielle Rappolt-Schlichtmann, Samantha G. Daley, Seoin Lim, Scott Lapinski, Kristin H. Robinson, Mindy Johnson
Journal of Educational Psychology Volume 105, Number 4, ISSN 0022-0663
Abstract
Science notebooks can play a critical role in activity-based science learning, but the tasks of recording, organizing, analyzing, and interpreting data create barriers that impede science learning for many students. This study (a) assessed in a randomized controlled trial the potential for a web-based science notebook designed using the Universal Design for Learning (UDL) framework to overcome the challenges inherent in traditional science notebooks, (b) explored how teacher characteristics and student use of supports in the digital environment were associated with productive inquiry science learning behaviors, and (c) investigated students' and teachers' perceptions of the key affordances and challenges of the technology to their learning. Use of the UDL science notebook resulted in improved science content learning outcomes (? = 0.34, p < 0.01), as compared with traditional paper-and-pencil science notebooks, and positively impacted student performance to the same degree, regardless of reading and writing proficiency and motivation for science learning at pretest. Students of teachers with greater experience using science notebooks and students who more frequently used the contextual supports within the notebook demonstrated more positive outcomes. Students and teachers reported overall quite positive experiences with the notebook, emphasizing high levels of interest, feelings of competence, and autonomy.
Citation
Rappolt-Schlichtmann, G., Daley, S.G., Lim, S., Lapinski, S., Robinson, K.H. & Johnson, M. (2013). Universal Design for Learning and Elementary School Science: Exploring the Efficacy, Use, and Perceptions of a Web-Based Science Notebook. Journal of Educational Psychology, 105(4), 1210-1225. Retrieved March 28, 2024 from https://www.learntechlib.org/p/161028/.
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Keywords
- Access to Education
- active learning
- Computer Uses in Education
- Elementary School Science
- Elementary School Students
- Elementary School Teachers
- Grade 4
- Hierarchical Linear Modeling
- inquiry
- Outcomes of Education
- Pretests Posttests
- Qualitative Research
- Statistical Analysis
- student attitudes
- student journals
- teacher attitudes
- Teacher Characteristics
Cited By
View References & Citations Map-
Research about Universal Design for Learning: Moving Beyond What We Think We Know
Cynthia Okolo, Ian Clemente & Shawn Daley, Michigan State University, United States
Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference 2019 (Mar 18, 2019) pp. 2601–2607
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UDL and the University: Understanding the Utility and Affordances of Universal Design for Learning in Postsecondary Contexts
Kathryn R. Green, Michigan State University, United States
Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference 2019 (Mar 18, 2019) pp. 2582–2587
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Technology Integration through Digital Science Notebooks
Seungoh Paek & Lori Fulton, University of Hawaii at Manoa, United States
Society for Information Technology & Teacher Education International Conference 2016 (Mar 21, 2016) pp. 2638–2644
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