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This thesis presents the results of a series of studies (on syllogisms, on the interpretation of mathematical statements and on probabilistic thinking) conducted with the idea that different, legitimate kinds of reasoning are used by humans in a contextual way, and that therefore no single logic (e.g., classical logic) can be expected to account for this diversity.
The crucial role of interpretation is highlighted, showing how intensional and extensional reasoning may be mobilized according to it. In particular, in communication settings, this depends on our adoption of a cooperative, credulous disposition, or on the contrary, of an adversarial, sceptical one.
In reasoning about mathematics in an educational setting, students (and teachers) may be enrolled in a back and forth between believing, doubting, making sense, giving arguments and proving. These changes in dispositions imply changes in the logics used. All the studies presented show, in different ways, evidence for cooperative, intensional reasoning and, in some cases, the possibility of a shift towards the acquisition of an extensional view. This suggest that if we expect as educators the adoption of specific norms and the development of reasoning skills from students, we need first to know well what the point of departure is where they are, and that it is often not at all “irrational”.
In the last three decades many research studies focused on the topic of multiple representations and their role for learning mathematics. As a result, there is a broad consensus in the scientific community that dealing with multiple representations in the mathematics classroom is a highly relevant matter. However, research addressing the role of the teachers in this context is still scarce. Consequently, this dissertation study raises the question of how much teachers know about and acknowledge this key role of multiple representations for the mathematics classroom. To this end, not only different aspects of teachers' specific professional knowledge and their views were investigated, but also their noticing of changes of representations in instances of student-teacher interaction, which can be seen as a theme-specific noticing. Using a multi-layer model of professional knowledge, this study addresses in particular questions of how such specific aspects of professional knowledge are interrelated and what components of knowledge and views play a role for the teachers' theme-specific noticing.
These research interests were addressed in the scope of three substudies, each of them including two different subsamples (English pre-service teachers/German pre-service teachers, pre-service teachers/in-service teachers, respectively in-service teachers at academic track secondary schools/in-service teachers at secondary schools for lower attaining students), in order to explore the possible roles of cultural background, teaching experience, and school types.
The different aspects of specific professional knowledge and views were assessed by means of a questionnaire instrument. For eliciting the teachers' theme-specific noticing, vignette-based questions were implemented. The data was analyzed mainly by quantitative methods, was however complemented by a qualitative in-depth analysis focusing on how the teachers' theme-specific noticing was informed by different components of their professional knowledge.
The results of this study suggest that the participants did not fully understand the key role of multiple representations for learning mathematics in the sense of their discipline-specific signicance and thus indicate specific needs for teacher education and professional development. Differences between the subsamples of teachers became apparent especially regarding the teachers' more situated professional knowledge and their noticing with respect to dealing with multiple representations. Furthermore, the findings of this study underpin the assumption that within the spectrum between teachers' situated and global professional knowledge and views regarding dealing with multiple representations, different components may be distinguished and suggest that in particular all of these components may play a role for teachers' theme-specific noticing.
Fragestellungen zur Konzeptualisierung und Messung professionsbezogener Kompetenzen von Lehrkräften stellen ein hochaktuelles Thema in der mathematikdidaktischen Forschung dar (z.B. Kunter et al., 2013; Kaiser et al., 2015). Trotz unterschiedlicher Ansätze in diesem Bereich besteht weitgehend Konsens darüber, dass Kompetenzen die persönlichen Voraussetzungen zur erfolgreichen Bewältigung berufsspezifischer situationaler Anforderungen beschreiben (Baumert & Kunter, 2013) und prinzipiell erlernbar und vermittelbar sind (Weinert, 2001b). Es gibt jedoch keine „Kompetenz“ per se, da die Beschreibung einer solchen stets einen relevanten berufsspezifischen Kontext voraussetzt (Hartig, 2008). Der Ausgangspunkt zur Beschreibung und Definition einer professionsbezogenen Kompetenz für Lehrkräfte sind folglich die beruflichen Anforderungen, die Lehrkräfte erfüllen müssen, um in Interaktion mit den Schülerinnen und Schülern die Lerngelegenheiten bereitzustellen, die verständnisvolle Lernprozesse ermöglichen (Lindmeier, 2011; Koeppen et al., 2008; Baumert & Kunter, 2013). Für Mathematiklehrkräfte wurde der Umgang mit vielfältigen Darstellungen als eine solche zentrale Anforderung beschrieben (Hill, Schilling & Ball, 2004; Ball, Thames & Phelps, 2008). Zahlreiche Studien weisen darauf hin, dass hierbei die Wechsel zwischen unterschiedlichen Darstellungsformen komplexe kognitive Prozesse erfordern und oftmals für viele Schülerinnen und Schüler zu einer Lernhürde werden (z.B. Ainsworth, Bibby & Wood, 1998; Duval, 2006; Ainsworth, 2006). Lehrkräfte benötigen daher spezifisches Wissen in diesem Bereich, um die Lernenden bei Darstellungswechseln unterstützen zu können (Duval, 2006; Mitchell, Charalambous & Hill, 2014; Dreher & Kuntze, 2015a, b). Lehrkräfte müssen jedoch auch in der Lage sein, Unterrichtssituationen zum Umgang mit Darstellungen zu analysieren, also Beobachtungen in Unterrichtsituationen mit diesem Wissen zu verknüpfen, um potentiell schwierige Darstellungswechsel erkennen zu können (Friesen, Dreher & Kuntze, 2015; Friesen & Kuntze, 2016). Es besteht weitgehend Konsens darüber, dass diese Analyse von Unterrichtssituationen eine wesentliche Voraussetzung dafür darstellt, dass Lehrkräfte überhaupt passende Lernangebote und Hilfestellungen zur Verfügung stellen können (z.B. Sherin, Jacobs & Philipps, 2011; Schoenfeld, 2011; Santagata & Yeh, 2016). Dennoch bleibt in aktuellen Konzeptualisierungen professionsbezogener Kompetenzen von Lehrkräften das Analysieren von Unterrichtssituationen im Hinblick auf potentiell hinderliche Darstellungswechsel weitgehend unberücksichtigt (z.B. Baumert & Kunter, 2013; Kaiser et al., 2015). Im Rahmen dieser Studie wird daher ein solches fachdidaktisches Analysieren von Unterrichtssituationen als wichtige professionsbezogene Kompetenz von Mathematiklehrkräften beschrieben. Da es bislang kaum empirische Studien gibt, in denen eine solche Kompetenz untersucht wurde, soll somit auch ein Beitrag zur Messung fachdidaktischer Analysekompetenz geleistet werden.
Um Kompetenzen von Lehrkräften unterrichtsnah zu erfassen, gelten vignettenbasierte Erhebungen als besonders geeignet (Kaiser et al., 2015; Blömeke, Gustafs-son & Shavelson, 2015). Entsprechend wurde im Rahmen dieser Studie ein vignettenbasiertes Testinstrument mit sechs Unterrichtssituationen aus dem Bereich Bruchrechnung (Klasse 6) entwickelt, in welchen der Umgang mit Darstellungswechseln eine zentrale Rolle spielt. Bislang gibt es wenige Untersuchungen dazu, welche Rolle unterschiedliche Vignettenformate für die Auseinandersetzung mit Unterrichtsvignetten (z.B. für die wahrgenommene Authentizität) und die Analyse zum Umgang mit vielfältigen Darstellungen spielt, dasselbe gilt für unterschiedliche Frageformate. Da die spezifischen Eigenschaften unterschiedlicher Vignet-tenformate und Frageformate bei der Kompetenzmessung jedoch durchaus eine Auswirkung auf die Schwierigkeit der Items haben können (Hartig, 2008), sind Untersuchungen hierzu im Rahmen dieser Studie von besonderem Interesse. Um dem beschriebenen Forschungsinteresse nachzugehen, wurde jede der sechs Un-terrichtssituationen im Testinstrument in drei Formaten (Text, Comic, Video) umgesetzt und offene sowie geschlossene Frageformate zur Analyse des Umgangs mit Darstellungen in den Unterrichtssituationen vorgelegt. Das beschriebene Testinstrument bearbeiteten N = 298 Lehramtsstudierende, Lehramtsanwärterinnen und Lehramtsanwärter sowie praktizierende Lehrkräfte. Die erhaltenen Daten wurden mit Raschmodellen analysiert, um die Qualität der vorgenommenen Kompetenzmessung zu prüfen (Bond & Fox, 2015).
Die Ergebnisse belegen eine gute Auseinandersetzung der Teilnehmerinnen und Teilnehmer mit den Vignetten in allen drei Formaten (Text, Comic, Video), wodurch eine wichtige Voraussetzung für die Analyse der vorgelegten Unterrichtssituation gegeben war. Es zeigte sich, dass fachdidaktische Analysekompetenz zum Umgang mit Darstellungen unabhängig von den eingesetzten Vignetten-formaten (Text, Comic, Video) als eindimensionales Konstrukt modelliert werden kann. Während die drei unterschiedlichen Vignettenformate keinen systemati-schen Einfluss auf die Analyse der Teilnehmerinnen und Teilnehmer zum Umgang mit Darstellungen zeigten, wurde nachgewiesen, dass die Items aus den geschlossenen Formaten systematisch leichter zu beantworten waren. Die Analyseergebnisse der Teilnehmerinnen und Teilnehmer lassen auf eine eher niedrige Ausprägung fachdidaktischer Analysekompetenz zum Umgang mit vielfältigen Darstellungen schließen, da potentiell problematische Darstellungswechsel in den Unterrichts-vignetten häufig nicht erkannt wurden. Insgesamt konnte festgestellt werden, dass die drei Vignettenformate Text, Comic und Video vergleichbar zur Erhebung fachdidaktischer Analysekompetenz zum Umgang mit vielfältigen Darstellungen geeignet sind.
The effect of direct instruction and web quest on learning outcome in computer science education.
(2018)
Answers to the questions of which instructional methods are suitable for school and should be applied in teaching individual subjects and also how instructional methods support the act of learning represent challenges to general education and education in individual subjects. This study focuses on the empirical examination of learning outcome with respect to two instructional methods: direct instruction and web quest. An SPF-2 × 2•2 design is used to control instructional method, time and class context. Learning outcome on QR code is assessed with reference to multiple-choice test items. The empirical findings show that learning with direct instruction performs better than web quest.
Gamification and game-based learning have been established as powerful tools in education. Location-based games (geogames) have been established following mainly a ‘seek-and-find’ game-mechanic, challenging mechanics like simulations are rarely used. We describe an approach for creating an educational location-based game (geogame). The central design problem consists in integrating an ecological simulation into the location-based game flow. We show how to combine these two game mechanics by simplifying complex simulations while maintaining their validity. In an empirical study we evaluate our geogame with secondary school students (N = 329). Our quasi-experimental pre-post-test design focuses on the game-related enjoyment provided by a simplified simulation task within a geogame compared to a more complex desktop simulation and to a geogame without simulation. The results show that the players of the Geogame spend much less time on interacting with the simulation than on other tasks. Nevertheless, the simulation within the geogame contributes positively to the game playing experience. Player enjoyment is even found to be slightly higher in the simulation geogame than in the indoor simulation. A critical threshold of time for using simulations within location-based game mechanics is discussed and related design-pattern for geogames are presented to support educators and game developers in the co-design of challenging location-based games. This study contributes to locate ecological simulations in areas where they actually take place. Complex topics and competencies in education become “real” for players in an outdoor experience.
We investigated retrieval-induced forgetting of motor sequences in samples of Chinese participants. Retrieval-induced forgetting occurs when selective retrieval of a subset of information stored in memory causes forgetting for the non-retrieved rest. This phenomenon critically depends on the organised storage of separate categories of memory representations. In studies with participants from a Western culture (Germany), a categorization in left- and right-hand movements previously had been supported by letter stimuli based on a spatial mental representation of the Roman alphabet. The same assignment of letters from the beginning or end of the alphabet to motor sequences performed either with the left- or the right-hand did not entail retrieval-induced forgetting in the present study, however (Experiment 1). In Experiment 2, visual features of displaying to-be-learned sequences additionally supported a distinction into left and right. In Experiment 3, learning trials provided verbal category labels. The occurrence of retrieval-induced forgetting in the latter two experiments suggests language-dependent organisation of non-verbal items in memory.
In Germany, secondary school students differ greatly in their science achievement, a dispersion that is far above the OECD average (Schiepe-Tiska, Rönnebeck, & Neumann, 2019). Immigrant students tend to be at the lower end of the scale in Germany – on average, they achieve substantially less well in science than non-immigrant students (OECD, 2016d), which is partially due to the German school system (Zoido, 2013). These differences in achievement translate into underrepresentation of immigrants in science-related jobs in Germany (OECD, 2008). Achievement and career choices are closely intertwined with academic self-concept (for an overview see Marsh & Craven, 2006). Regarding science self-concept, the pattern that immigrant students tend to score lower is present in many countries (e.g. Riegle-Crumb, Moore, & Ramos-Wada, 2011).
The goal of the present research project was to investigate these inequalities between immigrant and non-immigrant secondary school students. This was done focusing on secondary school students’ chemistry self-concepts. Chemistry self-concepts were focused on because achievement in chemistry is an important factor for careers in natural sciences (Cohen & Kelly, 2019). Research on chemistry self-concept has concentrated on young adults (e.g. Bauer, 2005; Xu & Lewis, 2011) and so little is known about secondary school students. Besides the impact of students’ migration background, the research project analyses the role that gender plays because gender has important effects on science self-concepts (e.g. Jurik, Gröschner, & Seidel, 2013; Riegle-Crumb et al., 2011; Wan & Lee, 2017).
A big challenge in this context was that the prevailing methods in academic self-concept research are prone to yield biased data (Byrne, 2002; Byrne et al., 2009). Although this was pointed out more than 15 years ago, the problem persists in science self-concept research. The present research project addresses this issue and presents a new mixed methods approach to culture-sensitive academic self-concept research. The term ‘culture’ is used in the sense of migration background, a concept that categorizes people’s migration histories in Germany. A combination of qualitative interview data and quantitative data permit an investigation of certain types of bias defined by Byrne and colleagues (2009). The pilot study operated with a chemistry self-concept questionnaire (N=116) and qualitative interviews (N=43). The main study was based on an extended questionnaire comprising several other scales (N=585) and deeper qualitative interviews (N=48).
The hypotheses based on the literature were that in Germany, (h1) immigrant students would show more negative chemistry self-concepts than non-immigrant students. (h2) Female students would show more negative chemistry self-concepts than male students. The third hypothesis (h3) was that the home environment has an important impact on students’ chemistry self-concepts. The first two hypotheses (h1 and h2) were not confirmed. Gender and migration background did not show a significant effect on students’ chemistry self-concepts. Instead, gender relations differ depending on the students’ migration background. Among students without a migration background, boys tend to have stronger chemistry self-concepts than girls. In contrast, among students with a Turkish migration background, girls tend to have stronger chemistry self-concepts. Existing science self-concept literature did not explain this.
Literature on gender relations in science in Turkey suggests that this interaction effect could be due to a more gender-neutral conception of science in Turkey. Slightly more women than men work in science in Turkey (OECD, 2009a) and girls achieve substantially better (Batyra, 2017a, 2017b). According to the third hypothesis (h3), the gender conceptions in Turkey could potentially be transmitted to students with a Turkish migration background in the home environment, through their parents or other people.
Science education literature did not provide a satisfying model for conceptualizing the influence of the home environment on students in the field of chemistry that would allow investigating the third hypothesis (h3). Therefore, the concept of chemistry capital was introduced based on the analysis of the interviews in the main study. Chemistry capital was developed based on the concept of science capital by Archer and colleagues (2015). Chemistry capital conceptualizes the resources a person possesses that have value in the field of chemistry. This encompasses social networks (e.g. knowing a chemist) as well as emotional and cognitive resources (e.g. attitudes towards chemistry and chemistry knowledge), and the engagement in chemistry-related activities. In particular, the concept allows analyzing the transmission processes of chemistry from the home environment to the individual student.
The qualitative analyses in the main study showed that the chemistry capital home environment influences the students in the field of chemistry in multiple ways. This supports hypothesis 3 (h3). Further, the data suggest that structural inequalities in the German school system might foster differences in chemistry. Students who already possess little chemistry capital in their home environments are in addition found more often at the type of school (Hauptschule) in which the proportion of chemistry teachers who do not hold a university degree in chemistry is the highest, depriving these students of another possible source of chemistry capital. Vice versa, students who already possess a lot of chemistry capital in their home environments more often attend school types (Gymnasium, Realschule) where also more formally qualified chemistry teachers are available, thus potentially widening the gap.
The mixed methods analysis in the main study suggested that a simple linear relationship between student chemistry self-concept and chemistry capital in the home environment does not exist. A study based on quantitative (or mixed methods) analyses of data of a larger sample on chemistry capital in the home environment and students’ chemistry self-concepts could provide further insights. It is not yet clear if the third hypothesis (h3) is true.
To sum up, the present research project thus advances the field of chemistry education in three regards: (i) it provides an approach to culture-sensitive academic self-concept. This approach proved to increase both the validity and the explanatory power of chemistry self-concept research. It is not chemistry-specific and can, thus, be used in other areas of research as well. (ii) The research discovered an interaction effect of gender and migration background on chemistry self-concept that was unknown in science education literature. (iii) It introduces and defines the concept of chemistry capital which permits to analyze chemistry education from a sociocultural perspective. Employing the concept of chemistry capital helps to shift the focus from the individual student to the resources a student possesses in the sociocultural context that help him or her succeed in the field of chemistry. This allows uncovering social inequalities in the field that need to be addressed in educational policy. Moreover, it can inspire intervention studies and application-focused research (e.g. approaches to culture-sensitive chemistry teaching).
This paper tries to answer the question whether the promising Content and Language Integrated Learning (CLIL) teaching method also has positive effects on the pragmatic competences of CLIL students compared to their peers in mainstream English as a Foreign Language (EFL) classrooms. To avoid deviances caused by other factors external to the teaching method, only students who have a similar language background were selected for the study by means of a questionnaire. Data on the articulations of requests, thanks, complaints, apologies, invitations, refusals and advice was collected during videotaped English role plays and role enactments. After the role plays/role enactments, students were interviewed about their performance and were given German Discourse Completion Tests (DCTs) to allow a comparison between respective articulations in their L1 and L2. Furthermore, teachers were questioned about the speech acts they used in CLIL and EFL classes and their judgements about the students’ possible activities.
The data on the formations and dissolutions of Czech, Hungarian, Polish and Slovenian national-level healthcare, higher education and energy policy interest groups show that there were relatively large organizational populations in these countries already at the outset of post-communist transition in 1990. In other words, there was no tabula rasa – the evolution of interest organizations did not start completely anew. There was, however, a substantial variation between policy fields and countries in the sizes of these pre-transition populations. What explains this variance? The chapter explores in detail the formation rates across the four countries and three policy fields through time. In their explanation, the authors focus on the nature of the communist regime, its overall repressiveness, the periods of political and economic liberalizations and the political mobilization and fragmentation in the period leading up to regime change. On the basis of the Hungarian sub-sample, where such data are reliably available, the chapter also compares the mortality rates of organizations founded before and after transition. The findings shed new light on the debates on civil society development and democratization in post-communist societies. The chapter also draws attention to the importance of the proper operationalization of fundamental political changes to the polity in population ecology theory in general, and in the energy–stability–area model of organizational density in particular.
What explains the formation rates of interest organizations in post-communist democracies over time? This chapter provides a bird’s eye view of the size and scope of the interest group populations in Hungary, the Czech Republic, Poland and Slovenia. To what extent did pre-communist organizations survive the transformation process and how radically was the interest group population transformed by the transition to a market economy, democracy and in some cases nation-building? The authors tackle these issues by exploring the formation and dissolution rates of organized interests in three non-related, yet critical policy areas for the viability of post-communist democracies – energy, healthcare and higher education. In doing so, they focus on a series of factors which might accelerate or decelerate the formation of organized interests. Besides the collapse of the communist regime and introduction of the market economy, the interest group landscape may also be profoundly affected by European Union accession, but also by key national legislation. Based on population ecology datasets which they compiled, the authors assess the volatility and continuity of each different interest group system from a cross-country and cross-policy perspective, while also comparatively exploring changes regarding the types of organizations (e.g. patients vs. medical profession, students vs. academic profession, energy producers vs. consumers, clean vs. dirty energy).
Technology criticism and data literacy: The case for an augmented understanding of media literacy
(2020)
Reviewing the history of media literacy education might help us to identify how creating media as an approach can contribute to fostering knowledge, understanding technical issues, and to establishing a critical attitude towards technology and data. In a society where digital devices and services are omnipresent and decisions are increasingly based on data, critical analysis must penetrate beyond the “outer shell” of machines – their interfaces – through the technology itself, and the data, and algorithms, which make these devices and services function. Because technology and data constitute the basis of all communication and collaboration, media literate individuals must in the future also have a sound understanding of technology and data literacy. This article examines the relevance of this broader definition of literacy and delivers a forward-looking defense of media literacy education in schools. It also posits the thesis that the digital transformation represents a challenge, which is confronting society, politics, and education alike.
The article analyses the strategies of Hungarian higher education interest organisations against the encroachments on academic freedom by Viktor Orbán's governments. We contrast the 2012–2013 and 2017–2019 protest waves and find that innovations in strategy came from new organisations in both periods, whereas established ones were rather passive or opted for the status quo. However, in the second period, new actors consciously declined to pursue wider systemic goals and aimed at building up formal organisations instead of loose, movement-like networks. The focus on keeping a unified front and interest representation on the workplace level did not change the overall outcome. Just like during the first period, the government was able to reach its goals without major concessions. Nevertheless, during the second protest wave the government was unable to divide and pacify its opponents, which stripped it of its legalistic strategy and revealed its authoritarianism.
In this text, the findings of cognitive psychology will be used to tackle certain misconceptions in academic philosophical learning contexts. It will be shown that some techniques that university teachers often recommend and on which students often rely on for working on texts and acquiring the contents of them and other contents – like for example highlighting, notetaking, and summarization – are not that effective for long-term retention. At least not if some aspects are not considered. The aim is to show what empirical research has found out about effective learning and how this can help to create tasks that foster long-term retention of philosophical contents which also helps with training higher-order skills such as applying, reflecting, evaluating, and modifying these contents.
The problem-solving performance of primary school students depend on their attitudes and beliefs. As it is not easy to change attitudes, we aimed to change the relationship between problem-solving performance and attitudes with a training program. The training was based on the assumption that self-generated external representations support the problem-solving process. Furthermore, we assumed that students who are encouraged to generate representations will be successful, especially when they analyze and reflect on their products. A paper-pencil test of attitudes and beliefs was used to measure the constructs of willingness, perseverance, and self-confidence. We predicted that participation in the training program would attenuate the relationship between attitudes and problem-solving performance and that non-participation would not affect the relationship. The results indicate that students’ attitudes had a positive effect on their problem-solving performance only for students who did not participate in the training.
When “software takes command”, people take fright – a reaction which frequently accompanies change or novelty. Their fears are understandable, but they also cloud people’s view of the potentials that digital tools and digital media hold for society and especially educational contexts. Their fears also define societal debates and contribute to a general lack of ambition when it comes to seizing the opportunities for broad collaboration in the design of a “digital society”. This paper identifies a selection of conceptual digital potentials, presents the initial findings of an ongoing study and uses these as a basis to formulate recommendations for reclaiming society’s formative authority over the shape of the digital in its midst.
Englisch:
The article tests the energy–stability–area (ESA) model of interest group population density on a sample of different 2018 Czech, Hungarian, Polish and Slovenian energy, higher education and health care interest organisation populations. The unique context of recent simultaneous political, economic and in the cases of Czechia and Slovenia, national transitions present a hard test for population ecology theory. Besides the area (constituency size) and energy (resources, issue certainty) terms, the article brings the stability term back into the center of analysis. The stability term, that is, the effect of a profound change or shock to the polity is operationalised as Communist-era population densities. As all three policy domains are heavily state controlled and tightly regulated, the effect of neocorporatist interest intermediation is also tested. The article finds strong support for the energy and neocorporatism hypotheses and provides evidence for the effect of communist-era organisational population density on post-transition densities: The size of 2018 organisational populations is found to be dependent on pre-transition densities. The relationship is, however, not linear but curvilinear. Nevertheless, the analysis indicates that the effect of pre-transition population size is moderated by other environmental level factors.
Deutsch:
Der Artikel testet das Energie-Stabilitäts-Gebietsmodell (ESA) der Bevölkerungsdichte von Interessengruppen an einer Stichprobe verschiedener tschechischer, ungarischer, polnischer und slowenischer Bevölkerungen von Energie-, Hochschul- und Gesundheitsorganisationen aus dem Jahr 2018. Der einzigartige Kontext der jüngsten gleichzeitigen politischen, wirtschaftlichen und im Falle Tschechiens und Sloweniens nationaler Übergänge stellt die Theorie der Populationsökologie auf eine harte Probe. Neben den Begriffen Flächen (Wahlkreisgröße) und Energie (Ressourcen, Themensicherheit) rückt der Artikel den Stabilitätsbegriff wieder in den Mittelpunkt der Analyse. Der Stabilitätsbegriff, dh die Auswirkung einer tiefgreifenden Veränderung oder eines Schocks auf das Gemeinwesen, wird als Bevölkerungsdichte der kommunistischen Ära operationalisiert. Da alle drei Politikbereiche stark staatlich kontrolliert und streng reguliert sind, wird auch die Wirkung neokorporatistischer Interessenvermittlung getestet. Der Artikel findet starke Unterstützung für die Energie- und Neokorporatismus-Hypothesen und liefert Belege für den Effekt der organisationalen Bevölkerungsdichte der kommunistischen Ära auf die Dichte nach dem Übergang: Die Größe der Organisationsbevölkerung im Jahr 2018 hängt von der Dichte vor dem Übergang ab. Der Zusammenhang ist jedoch nicht linear, sondern krummlinig. Dennoch zeigt die Analyse, dass der Effekt der Bevölkerungsgröße vor dem Übergang durch andere Umweltfaktoren gemildert wird.
This article presents an analysis of the formation of organized interest groups in the post-communist context and organizational populations over time. We test two theories that shed doubt on whether vital rates of interest groups are explained by individual incentives, namely, the political opportunity structure and population ecology theory. Based on an analysis of the energy policy and higher education policy organizations active at the national level in Hungary, Poland, and Slovenia, we find that while the period of democratic and economic transition indeed opened up the opportunity structure for organizational formations, it by no means presented a clean slate. Communist-era successor and splinter organizations survived the collapse of communism, and all three countries entered transition with relatively high density rates in both organizational populations. We also find partial support for the density dependence hypothesis. Surprisingly, the EU integration process, the intensity of legislative activity, and media attention do not seem to have meaningfully influenced founding rates in the two populations
Females and students of non-dominant ethnicity are less likely to aspire to science careers. However, overcoming discrimination in science and chemistry is a challenging task, especially in vocational orientation. Thus, there is a need for strategies to support young women in their identity formation in science and chemistry. This article presents a scheme for supporting young women’s science identity formation in conversations about vocational orientation. The goal is to support young women in developing a positive attitude towards careers in chemistry. This attitude is part of cultural chemistry capital. The scheme was developed based on a study conducted as part of the project DiSenSu. Here, coachings for vocational orientation for young women in science and chemistry are provided, following the idea of Science in Public. In the coaching, the attitudes towards science and chemistry were determined using quantitative data. Based on these results, coaches conducted conversations with the participants. Qualitative analysis of 11 conversations revealed strategies coaches used to support young women in their vocational orientation. The study shows how the participants’ attitude towards careers in chemistry is used as a starting point for coachings. Also, it provides strategies that can be used to promote young women’s cultural chemistry capital.