Scientific reasoning
One approach to scientific reasoning uses an evidence → reasoning → claim framework (1).
Reasoning can be descriptive, relational, linear-causal, or multicomponent causal:
References
Toulmin S., (1958), The Uses of Argument, Cambridge University Press.
Deng, J. M. & Flynn, A. B. “Reasoning, granularity, and comparisons in students’ arguments on two organic chemistry items”, Chem. Educ. Res. Pract. 2021, 22, 749–771.
Bodé, N. E.; Deng, J. M.; & Flynn, A. B. “Getting Past the Rules and to the WHY: Causal Mechanistic Arguments When Judging the Plausibility of Organic Reaction Mechanisms.” J. Chem. Educ. 2019, 96(6), 1068–1082.
Deng, J. M, Carle, M. S., & Flynn, A. B. “Supporting students’ reasoning skill development in chemistry arguments through constructive alignment” Invited book chapter, RSC Advances in Chemistry Education, 2022, Chapter 5, 74–89.
Deng, J. M.; Rahmani, M.; & Flynn, A. B. “The role of language in students’ justifications of scientific phenomena”. Int. J. Sci. Educ., 2022, 44, 2131–2151.