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Article
A cultural perspective on the structure of student interest in science
International Journal of Science Education (2011)
  • John Ainley, ACER
  • Mary Ainley, University of Melbourne
Abstract
In this article, the authors examine the nature of interest in science as represented in the Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) 2006 data. They discuss the interconnections between measures of knowledge, affect, and value as components of interest in science. Working from a perspective acknowledging that many of the models of motivation represented in the literature have been developed in Western countries, the authors investigated whether the ways that knowledge, affect, and value combine in the structure of students' interest in science might vary in line with historical and cultural traditions. Four countries were chosen to represent contrasting cultural values as defined in analyses of the World Values Surveys and the European Values Surveys - Colombia, Estonia, USA, and Sweden. Models are described showing variations in fit across the four countries. Efforts to increase the attractiveness of science to students should take heed of the fact that all models indicated a central role for enjoyment of science in the paths linking personal value, interest, and current science activities with intentions for future participation in science. Differences in the strength of the associations between science knowledge and interest in science support the proposition that the interconnections between knowledge, affect, and value need to be understood in relation to students' broader historical and cultural context.
Keywords
  • Achievement tests,
  • Comparative testing,
  • Cross cultural studies,
  • Cultural influences,
  • Science education,
  • Scientific literacy,
  • Secondary school students
Publication Date
January, 2011
Citation Information
John Ainley and Mary Ainley. "A cultural perspective on the structure of student interest in science" International Journal of Science Education Vol. 33 Iss. 1 (2011)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/john_ainley/146/