Some subscribers to TIPS and TeachEdPsych might be interested in an 
article "Bao et al.'s Comparison of Learning and Scientific Reasoning 
in Chinese & U.S. Schools: Alternate Conclusions and Recommendations" 
[Hake (2012)]. The abstract reads:

************************************************
ABSTRACT: The features, findings, conclusions, and recommendations of 
the valuable "Science" report "Learning and Scientific Reasoning: 
Comparisons of Chinese and U.S. students show that content knowledge 
and reasoning skills diverge" by Bao et al. (2009) are summarized.

The primary feature is that Chinese and U.S. students enrolled in 
introductory physics courses for science and engineering majors in 
medium-rated universities were tested near the start of classes with 
the "Force Concept Inventory" (FCI), the "Brief Electricity and 
Magnetism Assessment" (BEMA), and the "Lawson Classroom Test of 
Scientific Reasoning" (LCTSR).

The primary finding is that although Chinese students' averaged 
scores on the FCI and BEMA indicated *good conceptual understanding* 
of basic physics areas, and were, respectively, 1.9 and 2.9 standard 
deviations above those of U.S. students, their scores on the LCTSR 
were about the same as those of the U.S. students: at the low end of 
Lawson's hypothetical-deductive reasoning range.

Bao et al. draw the conclusion that "CURRENT EDUCATION AND ASSESSMENT 
IN THE STEM DISCIPLINES OFTEN EMPHASIZES FACTUAL RECALL OVER DEEP 
UNDERSTANDING OF SCIENCE REASONING" and recommend that researchers 
and educators (1) "invest more in the development of a balanced 
method of education, such as incorporating more *inquiry-based 
learning*," and (2) measure "not only content knowledge but also 
other factors so as to obtain a more holistic evaluation of students."

I criticize the Bao et al. report on two counts: (1) the conclusion 
doesn't follow from the findings; and (2) the recommendations are 
either ambiguous, problematic, or invalid.

A conclusion consistent with the findings is: AVERAGE SCORES BY BOTH 
CHINESE AND U.S. FRESHMEN ON FCI, BEMA, AND LCTSR INDICATE THAT K-12 
STEM EDUCATION IN BOTH THOSE COUNTRIES EMPHASIZES FACTUAL RECALL OVER 
CONCEPTUAL UNDERSTANDING AND SCIENTIFIC REASONING.

Recommendations that are, in my view, less ambiguous, less 
problematic, and more valid are: K-12 EDUCATORS SHOULD (1) utilize 
interactive engagement, inquiry, cognitive enhancement methods, and 
tests of reasoning; (2) emphasize a few fundamental concepts of STEM; 
and (3) develop age-appropriate assessments of concepts, 
epistemological beliefs, learning attitudes, and reasoning so as to 
*formatively* assess the effectiveness of their teaching methods. In 
addition, IN THE U.S. EFFORTS SHOULD BE MADE TO (4) reduce poverty, 
(5) upgrade the education, salary, and prestige of K-12 teachers, and 
(6) establish National Education Standards.
************************************************

To access the complete 385 kB article please click on <http://bit.ly/zQfIdo>.

Richard Hake, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Indiana University
Honorary Member, Curmudgeon Lodge of Deventer, The Netherlands
President, PEdants for Definitive Academic References which Recognize the
       Invention of the Internet (PEDARRII)
<rrh...@earthlink.net>
<http://www.physics.indiana.edu/~hake>
<http://www.physics.indiana.edu/~sdi>
<http://HakesEdStuff.blogspot.com>
<http://iub.academia.edu/RichardHake>

"Human history becomes more and more a race between education and catastrophe."
           H. G. Wells (1920) in "The Outline of History"


REFERENCES [URL shortened by <http://bit.ly/> and accessed on 07 Feb 2012.]
Bao, L., T. Cai, K. Koenig, K. Fang, J. Han, J. Wang, Q. Liu, L. 
Ding, L. Cui, Y. Luo, Y. Wang, L. Li, & N. Wu. 2009a. "Learning and 
Scientific Reasoning: Comparisons of Chinese and U.S. students show 
that content knowledge and reasoning skills diverge." Science 
323(5914): 586 - 587, 30 January; online as a 184 kB pdf at 
<http://bit.ly/90sdAG>; supporting material is online as a 152 kB pdf 
at <http://bit.ly/aNmbVz>. See also the longer report "Learning of 
content knowledge and development of scientific reasoning ability: A 
cross culture comparison" [Bao et al. (2009b)].

Bao, L., K. Fang, T. Cai, J. Wang, L. Yang, L. Cui, J. Han, L. Ding, 
& Y. Luo. 2009b. "Learning of content knowledge and development of 
scientific reasoning ability: A cross culture comparison." Am. J. 
Phys. 77(12): 1118-1123; online to subscribers at 
<http://bit.ly/wV1wbe>.

Hake , R.R. 2012. "Bao et al.'s Comparison of Learning and Scientific 
Reasoning in Chinese & U.S. Schools: Alternate Conclusions and 
Recommendations," online as a 385 kB pdf at  <http://bit.ly/zQfIdo>. 
The abstract and link to the complete article are being transmitted 
to various discussion lists and are also on my blog "Hake'sEdStuff" 
at <http://bit.ly/zM0Jqi> with a provision for comments.

Wells, H.G. 1920. "The Outline of History." For a Wikipedia entry 
which discusses the interesting history of this treatise see 
<http://bit.ly/yCkMjN>. For Amazon.com information on a two volume 
set published in 1949 by Garden City Books see 
<http://amzn.to/yvpDwU>.
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