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Discussion Maps

Discussion Maps are similar to semantic maps except they target rather than course lecture or reading materials. These maps present are a way to engage in classroom ‘sense-making’ discussions. A discussion map is a graphic timeline created by the instructor (or students) on which a discussion is recorded. It is typically composed of a “key question” and the refuting ideas and/or commentary. Discussion maps enable instructors to monitor students’ level of participation and gain insight into the origins of ideas and meaningful claims that are useful and/or plausible to students..

  1. Discussion maps are most effective when sense-making discussion is applied to entry level scientific questions (e.g., asking a group of students where seeds come from).
  2. Discussion maps are a good evaluative tool for instructors who need to measure student knowledge and identify areas where students need additional instruction.
  3. The instructor moderates the discussion so that students are equitably able to express their thoughts and create dialogue with one another

  1. Start a discussion with a question.
  2. Create a page that has a timeline labeled “start” and “stop.”
  3. Draw boxes that contain the claims, comments, ideas and/or questions that students asked in chronological order.
  4. Any claim that refutes or strengthens another claim is illustrated with an arrow.
  5. Any claim that doesn’t add to the discussion flow should be included at the bottom of the map and remain unconnected.

  1. Helps novice students learn about the nature of science or engineering.
  2. Useful for instructors in evaluating student ideas.
  3. Builds student interest in science or engineering.
  4. Discussion maps allow the instructor to create a model that provides a visual understanding of students’ thinking processes.
  5. Discussions create spaces where students can express their ideas differently than in traditional school in-class interactions.
  6. Students improve their communication skills when discussing topics and reviewing discussion maps.
  7. Analyzing discussion maps can help instructors revise their instruction by selecting to omit topics that students didn’t discuss or by adding in areas that warrant additional discussion
  8. Discussion maps can be used as a study aid when carefully monitored and facilitated by the instructor