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Florencia K. Anggoro [5]Florencia Anggoro [1]
  1. Designing Exhibits to Support Relational Learning in a Science Museum.Benjamin D. Jee & Florencia K. Anggoro - 2021 - Frontiers in Psychology 12.
    Science museums aim to provide educational experiences for both children and adults. To achieve this goal, museum displays must convey scientifically-relevant relationships, such as the similarities that unite members of a natural category, and the connections between scientific models and observable objects and events. In this paper, we explore how research on comparison could be leveraged to support learning about such relationships. We describe how museum displays could promote educationally-relevant comparisons involving natural specimens and scientific models. We also discuss how (...)
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    Mutual alignment comparison facilitates abstraction and transfer of a complex scientific concept.Judy M. Orton, Florencia K. Anggoro & Benjamin D. Jee - 2012 - Educational Studies 38 (4):473-477.
    Learning about a scientific concept often occurs in the context of unfamiliar examples. Mutual alignment analogy ? a type of analogical comparison in which the analogues are only partially understood ? has been shown to facilitate learning from unfamiliar examples . In the present study, we examined the role of mutual alignment analogy in the abstraction and transfer of a complex scientific concept from examples presented in expository texts. Our results provide evidence that (a) promoting comparison between two examples and (...)
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    Children’s Spontaneous Gestures Reflect Verbal Understanding of the Day/Night Cycle.Caroline M. Gaudreau, Florencia K. Anggoro & Benjamin D. Jee - 2020 - Frontiers in Psychology 11.
    Understanding the day/night cycle requires integrating observations of the sky (an Earth-based perspective) with scientific models of the solar system (a space-based perspective). Yet children often fail to make the right connections and resort to non-scientific intuitions – for example, the Sun moving up and down – to explain what they observe. The present research explored whether children’s gestures indicate their conceptual integration of Earth- and space-based perspectives. We coded the spontaneous gestures of 85 third-grade children in U.S. public schools (...)
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