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Detective scaffolding for within-session reasoning development: a three-phase framework evaluated in polymer engineering and pre-university outreach

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arXiv:2606.07279v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: This paper presents a detective scaffolding framework -- a three-phase instructional sequence (Hypothesis Activation -> Evidence Structuring -> Causal Integration) in which engineering students investigate a realistic industrial defect scenario using staged in-class polls as designed evidence probes. Unlike conventional uses of student response systems for engagement, the framework positions each poll as an Evidence-Centred Design instrument...

arXiv:2606.07279v1 Announce Type: cross Abstract: This paper presents a detective scaffolding framework -- a three-phase instructional sequence (Hypothesis Activation -> Evidence Structuring -> Causal Integration) in which engineering students investigate a realistic industrial defect scenario using staged in-class polls as designed evidence probes. Unlike conventional uses of student response systems for engagement, the framework positions each poll as an Evidence-Centred Design instrument targeting a specific reasoning capability. In the primary implementation, 80 Year~3 polymer engineering students progressed from prior-knowledge-driven misconception (71% attributing defects to temperature) to complete root-cause convergence (100\% identifying humidity; Fisher's exact test, $p < .001$) across four sequenced prompts within a single 90-minute lecture slot. A dual-accuracy analysis revealed that at one intermediate stage, textbook-correct and analytically valid responses diverged, illustrating why conventional scoring can misrepresent reasoning quality. In a transferability study, 26 Year~12 students with no engineering background achieved identical root-cause identification rates across two adapted scenarios, with significant gains in data-analysis confidence and AI explanation ability. The results suggest that the pedagogical structure, rather than disciplinary content, drives the convergence effect, implying portability across disciplines and educational levels.
an Evidence-Centred Design (ORG) Fisher (PERSON)
Originally published by arXiv CS Read original →