Creating Dialogic Spaces in STEM Education: A Comparative Study of Ground Rules
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Abstract
This article reports on a comparative case study that examined the ground rules used to facilitate a dialogic space in two discrete and diverse research studies: Year 5 & 6 children learning to code with ScratchMaths as part of their mathematics programmes, and crop farmers in rural east Africa developing their practice through various communications. The intention was to see if there were common actions or principles important for the establishment of ground rules in dialogic spaces in general. Understanding the nature of dialogic space has become increasingly important in many areas of education. STEM subjects, particularly when integrated, frequently involve collaborative interaction, and utilise a dialogical approach. Some initial aspects of ground rules were collaboratively identified, with both studies then independently analysed to identify emerging themes related to these ground rules. Several key elements emerged: developing the processes for interaction and communication; developing trust between participants; developing respectful dialogue; teacher roles; and facilitating collaborative work and the co-construction of meaning. The comparative case study suggested that these were important for other education work when establishing dialogic space.
Citation
Rhodes, K., Calder, N., Casebourne, I., Martin, K., & James, C. (2026). Creating Dialogic Spaces in STEM Education: A Comparative Study of Ground Rules. Education Sciences, 16(1). https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci16010165
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MDPI AG