The Affordances of Fiction for Teaching Chemistry

  • Randy Yerrick Associate Dean for the Graduate School of Educaiton, State Univeristy of New York, University at Buffalo
  • Tiffany Simons Chemistry Teacher

Abstract

As science fiction has a way of capturing the human imagination that few other genres can rival, this study sought to investigate the effects of using science fiction on the performance and interest of high school chemistry students. An action research approach was used to guide the first author’s practice as she studied two college preparatory chemistry classrooms. One class was used as a control group and received traditional chemistry instruction through lecture and labs. The second class was provided with supplemental excerpts of science fictional reading and film. Student scores on a pre-assessment and post-assessment achievement test items were analyzed and supplemented with student interviews and field note observations, and a teacher reflective journal was used to complement achievement data and inform findings regarding the effectiveness of including fiction as a pedagogical choice. Implications for this study on teaching tools, methodologies, and curriculum development are discussed.

Author Biographies

Randy Yerrick, Associate Dean for the Graduate School of Educaiton, State Univeristy of New York, University at Buffalo
Dr. Randy Yerrick is a science education professor at the University at Buffalo where he also serves as Associate Dean for the Graduate School of Educaiton.
Tiffany Simons, Chemistry Teacher
Tiffany Simons is a chemistry teacher in New York and a graduate student at the University at Buffalo.

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Published
2017-10-05