Logo image
What Happens When Early Childhood Science Teachers Value Student Authorship?
Journal article   Peer reviewed

What Happens When Early Childhood Science Teachers Value Student Authorship?

Catherine Lammert, Brian Hand and Alison Warren
Science education (Salem, Mass.), Vol.110(3), pp.726-738
05/2026
DOI: 10.1002/sce.70034

View Online

Abstract

This study investigates the impact of generative learning environments on early childhood students’ language development and scientific understanding through the lens of student authorship. Focusing on three second‐grade teachers, we explore how generative and replicative practices influence the degree of multimodality in students’ science writing. Prior research indicates that learning environments characterized by knowledge generation encourage students to leverage their linguistic and cognitive resources and promote the development of representational fluency. However, few studies on this topic have been conducted with early childhood students. Findings of the current multiple case study reveal that students in generative environments tend to express their scientific ideas through more diverse modalities (i.e., representational and extensional rather than decorational) than those in replicative environments. Further, educators who adhere to replicative practices overlook the potential of students’ varied linguistic resources, which reinforces educational inequities for marginalized students. The study underscores the necessity for early childhood educators to deepen their knowledge of language as an epistemic tool and value student authorship opportunities in science.
early childhood multimodality science vocabulary writing

Details

Metrics

9 Record Views
Logo image