Our conversations about arguments began in Nashville in the Spring of
1996 in Richard Duschl's doctoral seminar that we were both attending,
Marilar Jiménez-Aleixandre as a visiting scholar at Vanderbilt
University. Jiménez-Aleixandre and Duschl were designing authentic
problems in genetics for the University of Santiago de Compostela-based
RODA project aimed at engaging high school students in argumentation.
Erduran and Duschl had been working on Project SEPIA extending their
work in Pittsburgh schools to the design of curricula that support
epistemological aspects of scientific inquiry including argumentation.
In that spring we attended a NARST s- sion in St Louis, where Gregory
Kelly, Steven Druker and Catherine Chen presented a paper about
argumentation. As a consequence, a symposium about argumentation was
organised (possibly the first of its kind) at the 1997 NARST meeting in
Chicago, including papers from Kelly and colleagues and from
Jiménez-Aleixandre, Bugallo and Duschl. The symposium was attended,
among others, by Rosalind Driver, who had just submitted an application
for funding of an argumentation project based at King's College London,
a project Erduran would incidentally work on after Driver's untimely
death. From this time frame in the 1990s to the present day,
argumentation studies in science education have increased at a rapid
pace, from stray papers for which we were unable to find an appropriate
strand in a conference, to a wealth of research base exploring ever more
sophisticated issues.