Eliciting Student Thinking Training

Importance of eliciting student ideas

An accumulation of research strongly suggests that students come to school with ideas, beliefs and experiences that are relevant to learning targeted science concepts.  The cognitive structures they develop by making connections among their everyday observations, societal influences, and previous schooling may promote or hinder student learning. (National Research Council, 2003).  Some experiences lead to strongly held misconceptions that resist change even in the face of instruction that is directly relevant to the concept in question.  Eliciting student ideas is important for revealing existing cognitive structures and resulting misconceptions that should be addressed in assessments.

Elicitation strategies

Several strategies for eliciting student ideas have been used by science teachers and education researchers.  We include here a selection of methods with brief descriptions to point out the utility of each.

Prediction

Multiple choice questions

Concept map

Prompt Elements

Regardless of the particular strategy selected, prompts that are effective in eliciting student thinking generally share the following features.

Accessible to students

Clearly target an idea of interest

Lend themselves to expansive answers

Connects with students’ lives