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Refining the opportunity to learn construct through the productive disciplinary engagement framework
Citation
Ong, Y. S., Lee, Y.-J., & Leowardy, M. (2024). Refining the opportunity to learn construct through the productive disciplinary engagement framework. Asia Pacific Journal of Education, 44(3), 582–596. https://doi.org/10.1080/02188791.2024.2390665
Abstract
Opportunity to learn (OTL) is a ubiquitous measure of the likelihood of learning in educational research, which typically has been characterized by three dimensions: time, coverage of content, and quality of instruction. The last dimension has been defined in highly divergent ways, which gives it a double-edged nature. While it may be operationalized to better serve a specific problem or context, it also makes it harder to achieve consensus or derive broader implications across studies. Using the four design principles from the Productive Disciplinary Engagement (PDE) framework, we show how PDE can characterize the quality of instruction dimension in OTL that reflects contemporary understandings of the end-goals of science education i.e. learning science as practice. This revision is valuable for science educators and evaluators who rely on OTL measures for it helps them: i) evaluate the quality of instruction consistent with reformed science teaching in valid and reliable ways, and ii) address questions about the adequacy of content coverage in the subject. We exemplify analysis using this refined OTL model with a case study of middle-school learners in Singapore engaged in the challenging scientific practice of argumentation.
Publisher
Taylor & Francis
Journal
Asia Pacific Journal of Education
DOI
10.1080/02188791.2024.2390665
Project
DEV 02/19 LYJ
Funding Agency
Ministry of Education, Singapore