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Article
Deliberation versus Dispute: The Impact of Argumentative Discourse Goals on Learning and Reasoning in the Science Classroom
Informal Logic (2009)
  • Mark Felton, San Jose State University
  • Merce Garcia-Mila, University of Barcelona
  • Sandra Gilabert, University of Barcelona
Abstract
Researchers in science education have converged on the view that argumentation can be an effective intervention for promoting knowledge construction in science classrooms.
However, the impact of such interventions may be mediated by individuals’ task goals while arguing. In argumentative discourse, one can distinguish two overlapping but distinct kinds of activity: dispute and deliberation. In dispute the goal is to defend a conclusion by undermining alternatives, whereas in deliberation the goal is to arrive at a conclusion by contrasting alternatives. In this study, we examine the impact of these discourse goals on both content learning and argument quality in science.
Keywords
  • argumentation,
  • argumentative discourse,
  • discourse goals,
  • dialogue,
  • scientific reasoning,
  • science learning,
  • deliberation
Publication Date
December 17, 2009
DOI
10.22329/il.v29i4.2907
Publisher Statement
Copyright The Authors.
Deliberation versus Dispute: The Impact of Argumentative Discourse Goals on Learning and Reasoning in the Science Classroom was originally published in Informal Logic, 2009, Volume 29, Number 4, pp. 417-446. It can also be found online at this link: https://doi.org/10.22329/il.v29i4.2907
Citation Information
Mark Felton, Merce Garcia-Mila and Sandra Gilabert. "Deliberation versus Dispute: The Impact of Argumentative Discourse Goals on Learning and Reasoning in the Science Classroom" Informal Logic Vol. 29 Iss. 4 (2009) p. 417 - 446 ISSN: 0824-2577
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/mark-felton/8/