Title of article :
The Effect of the Flipped Classroom on the Nature of Science (NOS) and Students Achievement in Biology
Author/Authors :
Sardari, Marziyeh Department of Education - Faculty of Education& Psychology - University of Tabriz , Mahmoodi, Firooz Department of Education - Faculty of Education& Psychology - University of Tabriz , Fathi Azar, Eskandar Department of Education - Faculty of Education& Psychology - University of Tabriz , Badri, Rahim Department of Education - Faculty of Education& Psychology - University of Tabriz
Abstract :
Background: Nowadays, new technologies as an integral part of the educational setting have created unique opportunities for
teachers to apply various instructional and teaching methods to
better educate students. This paper aimed at investigating the effect
of the flipped classroom method on the nature of science (NOS) and
achievement.
Methods: This was a pretest-posttest semi-experimental study
with control group. The population included all tenth grade female
students of Tabriz city in the 2017-2018. The sample size consisted
of 45 students of tenth grade selected by cluster sampling method
in which 23 of them were in the experimental group and 22 of them
were in the control group. Data gathering tools in this study included
the questionnaire of NOS (Liang et al, 2008) and an teacher made
achievement exam in biology course. Data were analyzed using
covariance analysis.
Results: Results showed that in the whole group comparison,
the mean score of achievement in the experimental group was
significantly higher than that in the control group (P=0.02). There
was no significant difference on effect of flipped classroom on the
NOS between two groups (P=0.07).
Conclusion: The Flipped Classroom has led to an increase in
learning in students, thus it affects their academic development, but
it did not affect students’ nature of science.
Keywords :
Flipped classroom , The nature of science , Biology course , Students achievement
Journal title :
Interdisciplinary Journal of Virtual Learning in Medical Sciences