Bifurcation and Hysteresis Effects in Student Performance: The Signature of Complexity and Chaos in Educational Research

Authors

  • Dimitrios Stamovlasis Aristotle University of Thessaloniki

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.29173/cmplct22964

Abstract

This paper addresses some methodological issues concerning traditional linear approaches and shows the need for a paradigm shift in education research towards the Complexity and Nonlinear Dynamical Systems (NDS) framework. It presents a quantitative piece of research aiming to test the nonlinear dynamical hypothesis in education. It applies catastrophe theory and demonstrates that students’ achievements in science education could be described by a cusp model, where two cognitive variables are implemented as controls - the logical thinking as the asymmetry and the field dependence/independence as the bifurcation respectively. The results support the nonlinear hypothesis by providing the empirical evidence for bifurcation and hysteresis effects in students’ performance. Interpretation of the model is provided and implications and fundamental epistemological issues are discussed.

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Published

2014-08-21

Issue

Section

Research Articles