AI Article Synopsis

  • The study explores how first-year premedical students shift their understanding of the nature of science (NOS) through participation in a science book club, highlighting NOS as a socially constructed and evolving concept.
  • Students' NOS status was evaluated using the Views of Nature of Science Questionnaire (VNOS-C) at the beginning and end of the year, revealing improvements in understanding, regardless of book club involvement.
  • Those in the book club showed slightly higher NOS status, suggesting they may have already had a stronger foundation in NOS before participating, while highlighting the rarity of documented NOS growth outside explicit instruction.

Article Abstract

The leap from science student to scientist involves recognizing that science is a tentative, evolving body of knowledge that is socially constructed and culturally influenced; this is known as The Nature of Science (NOS). The aim of this study was to document NOS growth in first-year premedical students who participated in a science book club as a curricular option. The club read three acclaimed nonfiction works that connect biology to medicine via the history of scientific ideas. Students' NOS status was assessed as informed, transitional, or naïve at the beginning and end of the academic year using the Views of Nature of Science Questionnaire-Form C (VNOS-C). Focus group interviews and document analysis of assignments and exams provided qualitative evidence. VNOS-C scores improved over the academic year regardless of book club participation. Students who participated in book club had marginally better NOS status at the end of the year but also at the beginning, suggesting that book club may have attracted rather than produced students with higher NOS status. It is notable that an improvement in NOS understanding could be detected at all, as there have been few reports of NOS growth in the literature in which NOS was not an explicit topic of instruction.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3587859PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1187/cbe.12-02-0020DOI Listing

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