Clinical Interviews
Clinical Interview 1, Clinical Interview 2
Clinical Interview 1: General Information
- How much of the Earth do you think
is covered by water? 80%
- What do you enjoy the most about the
ocean? The abundant wildlife
- What are some things people do that
affect the ocean and the life that lives there? Dumping
stuff in the ocean
- Where do you think all life in the
ocean is concentrated in? Near the surface, in the middle or towards
the
bottom? surface
<- >Why do you think ocean life is
concentrated in the area you stated?
Coral reefs are there
- Would you be able to describe what
the photic zone is? no
- Do you know what the difference
between a shoal and a school of fish is?
no
- What kinds of life from the ocean do
people catch use? fish
- What is a fishery? Don’t know
- What types of seafood do you eat at home?
Fish stinks
- What do you know about squids? They’re
big and they ink people
- Why do you think squids, octopuses, and their relatives
got
the name cephalopod, or head-foot?
The way they look
- How many arms, or tentacles does a squid have? 8
- Are all of the arms of squid used for the same thing? no
- Do all of the squid arms look the same?
no
- Why do you think the squid has two tentacles that are
longer
than the other 8? To feel things
with
- How would you describe how a squid swims?
Pushes with his tentacles
- Can you think of a movie that is about the mythical giant
squids? If so, what’s it called and do you believe in it?
Pirates of the Caribbean 2, it
depends on who is telling it and how
- Can squids change their color based on their surroundings?
If so, how do they do this? Yes
– don’t know how they do it
- Can you tell the difference between a male and female
squid by looking at the external features? no
Kenan, who is
entering 7th
grade this fall, was quick to answer the questions he know but took his
time
deciding what the answer was if he did not know or was unsure of the
answer. He
knew what a lot of the anatomy of the squid was, where it was located
and how
it was used. He understood the myths of the giant squids, and never
fully made
up his mind about whether or not it could be completely true or not. He
also
knew general knowledge about the squid but not the very detailed
information
that comes with performing the lab.
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Clinical Interview 2: Oceans
Question
One:
How
much of our earth is covered in water?
Question
Two:
How
much of this water is appropriate for humans to drink? How do you know?
Question
Three:
Squid
are an invertebrate ocean mollusk that come in a variety of sizes from
small to
gigantic. Humans, as well as dolphins, are predators of the squid.
Explain
what you think will happen if squid are over fished by humans.
1) Brandon,
entering the seventh grade.
A)
Brandon quickly answered that the earth is covered in 70% water, but
then
reconsidered if this was also the amount of water in the human body.
B)
Brandon was unsure. He knew that ocean water was undrinkable. He
guessed that
fresh water came mainly from lakes and rain. When pushed he guessed
that 10% of
the earth's water is drinkable, and the other 20% was in transit
between fresh
and ocean.
C)
Brandon did not know a lot about squid, but he had studied octopus
before so
was applying this knowledge when answering this question. Brandon
inferred that
overfishing of any kind lead to an unbalance in nature, which could
lead to
"trouble."
2) Liz,
entering the fifth grade.
A)
Liz knew that oceans took up a large part of the world, and named all
four,
identifying the Pacific Ocean as the largest.
B)
Liz also knew that ocean water was not drinkable by humans. She knew
this
because she had been to Florida with her grandparents and had tasted
the water
while swimming. She did not have a guess as to how much of the world's
water
was safe to drink, but she had eliminated the ocean as a source.
C)
Liz surmised that if squid were over fished, the food web in the ocean
would
change. I asked her about the dolphin population and she assumed that
they
would have to eat more fish instead of squid.
3) Gustavo,
entering in the sixth grade
A) Gustavo confidently knew that the majority
of the
earth was covered by ocean, but did not name a percentage.
B)
Gustavo reasoned that since most of the water is from the ocean and the
ocean
is undrinkable then the water we could not drink was much less. I asked
him
where the rest of the water on earth was and he said lakes, rivers and
the
North Pole.
C)
Gustavo thought that if squid were over fished by humans that their
predators,
such as dolphins, would be strained for food and would most likely seek
it
elsewhere.
My analysis
and how it fits in:
All
three students had a basic understanding that the majority of our earth
is
covered in water. However, their perceptions of the amount of drinking
water on
the planet were not informed. All three correctly reasoned that because
most of
the water on Earth is from the ocean and the water in the ocean is
undrinkable,
then the amount of drinkable water must be much less. I believe that
Apples and
Oceans (lab one in this GEMS guide) offers a manipulative of the world
that
will allow them to comprehend how little fresh water, let alone
drinking water,
there is on the earth. This will also be a visual that sticks with
them, since
an apple is familiar to them and they can interpret it and even
demonstrate the
model to others.
All three
students were familiar with food chains/food webs and applied this
knowledge to
the third question. They reasoned, with varying degrees of knowledge,
that
overfishing would lead to an imbalance. All though they were familiar
with food
chains, they did not have a knowledge or concept of what would happen
or what
would be affected by a break or strain in this chain. The last activity
in Only
One Ocean where the students perform different roles as Biologist,
Consumer,
Ecologist, etc. and have a debate about overfishing and it's effects on
ocean
life would help to synthesize this knowledge into something applicable
to the
food chain question.
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