TY - JOUR
T1 - Polysemy in the domain-specific pedagogical use of graphs in science textbooks: The case of an electrocardiogram
AU - Eijck, van, M.W.
AU - Goedhart, M.J.
AU - Ellermeijer, T.
PY - 2011
Y1 - 2011
N2 - Polysemy in graph-related practices is the phenomenon that a single graph can
sustain different meanings assigned to it. Considerable research has been done on polysemy in graph-related practices in school science in which graphs are rather used as scientific tools. However, graphs in science textbooks are also used rather pedagogically to illustrate domain-specific textbook content and less empirical work has been done in this respect.
The aim of this study is therefore to better understand polysemy in the domain-specific
pedagogical use of graphs in science textbooks. From socio-cultural and cultural-historical
perspectives, we perceive polysemy as irreducible to either the meaning-making (semiotic)
resources provided by the graph or its readers who assign meaning to it. Departing from this framework, we simultaneously investigated: (a) the meanings 44 pre-university biology
students assigned to the Cartesian plane of a graph that is commonly used as a pedagogical tool in Dutch high school biology textbooks (an electrocardiogram); (b) the semiotic resources provided by this graph; and (c) the educational practices of which it is supposedly a part according to the actions constituted by the textbooks that were to be conducted by students. Drawing on this case, we show polysemy in the pedagogical use of graphs in science textbooks. In turn, we show how this polysemy can be explained dialectically as the result of both the meaning-making resources provided by the textbooks and the graphrelated practices in which students supposedly engaged by using their textbooks. The educational implications of these findings are discussed
AB - Polysemy in graph-related practices is the phenomenon that a single graph can
sustain different meanings assigned to it. Considerable research has been done on polysemy in graph-related practices in school science in which graphs are rather used as scientific tools. However, graphs in science textbooks are also used rather pedagogically to illustrate domain-specific textbook content and less empirical work has been done in this respect.
The aim of this study is therefore to better understand polysemy in the domain-specific
pedagogical use of graphs in science textbooks. From socio-cultural and cultural-historical
perspectives, we perceive polysemy as irreducible to either the meaning-making (semiotic)
resources provided by the graph or its readers who assign meaning to it. Departing from this framework, we simultaneously investigated: (a) the meanings 44 pre-university biology
students assigned to the Cartesian plane of a graph that is commonly used as a pedagogical tool in Dutch high school biology textbooks (an electrocardiogram); (b) the semiotic resources provided by this graph; and (c) the educational practices of which it is supposedly a part according to the actions constituted by the textbooks that were to be conducted by students. Drawing on this case, we show polysemy in the pedagogical use of graphs in science textbooks. In turn, we show how this polysemy can be explained dialectically as the result of both the meaning-making resources provided by the textbooks and the graphrelated practices in which students supposedly engaged by using their textbooks. The educational implications of these findings are discussed
U2 - 10.1007/s11165-009-9143-z
DO - 10.1007/s11165-009-9143-z
M3 - Article
VL - 41
SP - 1
EP - 18
JO - Research in Science Education
JF - Research in Science Education
SN - 0157-244X
IS - 1
ER -