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What are Your Students Really Thinking?

Using diagrams, white boards, and Socratic questioning to reveal your student’s innermost thoughts … about physics. What are Your Students Really Thinking?.  Modeling Physics. David Hestenes, Malcolm Wells, Greg Swackhamer, and 100’s of others

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What are Your Students Really Thinking?

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  1. Using diagrams, white boards, and Socratic questioning to reveal your student’s innermost thoughts … about physics What are Your Students Really Thinking?  Modeling Physics David Hestenes, Malcolm Wells, Greg Swackhamer, and 100’s of others Arizona State University http://modeling.asu.edu/ Extended Physics Community at UNC Greensboro, http://epc.uncg.edu • CASTLE (Capacitor Aided System for Teaching and Learning about Electricity) Dr. Melvin Steinberg, Smith College Available from PASCO,EM-8624A CASTLE Kit - PASCO scientific .

  2. The Modeling Method of Physics Teaching Recognized by the U.S. Department of Education one of the seven best K-12 educational technology programs out of 134 programs evaluated (2000). one of two exemplary programs in science education (2001).

  3. Unaware that their own ideas … differ drastically from those of the teacher, most students systematically misunderstand what they hear and read in traditional introductory physics. Why use whiteboards, diagrams and Socratic Questioning?

  4. Why is this so? • Before physics instruction, students hold naïve beliefs about mechanics which are incompatible with Newtonian concepts in most respects. • Such beliefs are a major determinant of student performance in introductory physics. • These beliefs are strongly held and often unconscious. • Students do not change their deeply held beliefs until they are conscious of those beliefs, are aware that those beliefs do not effectively explain the world, and have a viable alternative.

  5. A Taxonomy of Naïve Beliefs • Principles of motion 1. Description of motion: 2. In the absence of forces, every object remains at rest (with respect to the earth). 3. The causal principle of motion: Every motion has a cause. 4. The greater mass exerts the greater force. 5. the object which causes motion of the other exerts the greater force, because it overcomes the other’s opposition. 6. Dominance: Motion is determined by the larger of two competing forces. 7. Compromise: Motion is determined by a compromise among competing forces. B. Influences on Motion 1. Inertial Resistance 2. A constant force produces a constant velocity 3. Acceleration is due to increasing force. 4. A constant force has a limited effect depending on its magnitude. 5. long-range forces cannot act on an object in a vacuum. 6. An Internal force (or impetus) maintains motion of an object 7. Resistance opposes an applied force or consumes the impetus of a moving object. 8. Obstacles may redirect or stop motion, but they cannot be agents of an applied force. 9. Gravity is a tendency of objects to fall down, but is not a force. 10. Heavier objects fall faster.

  6. Research Backs up These Conclusions

  7. Advantages of Diagrams, Graphs and Socratic Approach • Multiple modes of expression appeal to each student’s strengths and give the teacher a more complete picture of what is happening inside student’s brains. • Students learn more thoroughly by having to explain their own thoughts well enough for other students to understand. • Diagrams and graph serve as a bridge between experiments, fundamental principles and specific equations. • Students can develop their own equations using the structure provided by diagrams and graphs. • Provides frequent opportunity for students to articulate, defend and test their own beliefs.

  8. Advantages Re-inforced by other aspects of modeling • Uses principles and equations developed in discovery-based labs. • Encourages student creativity – more interesting for teacher • Part of a learning cycle that truly changes student's beliefs

  9. Disadvantages of Socratic Approach • takes time • takes a year-long investment to develop student skills • takes great teacher skill to lead students through confusion and teach them how to think for themselves • more difficult and time consuming to plan lessons and classes • Learning curve for teacher • Resistance from some students, colleagues, parents and administrators

  10. What do I hope you will learn from this presentation? • How to use pie charts, bar graphs, vector addition diagrams, circuit diagrams, and motion graphs and diagrams to promote understanding and develop equations. • How to direct students through problem-solving Socratically without examples. • Diagrams, graphs and Socratic questioning are more successful when combined with a full modeling cycle • You want to work with other teachers to bring a modeling workshop to your district. (NCLB, funded through district, bring workshop to teachers)

  11. The Modeling Approach to Energy • Starts with the first law of thermodynamics. • Energy storage and transfer are more fundamental concepts than potential energy, kinetic energy and work. • There are not different forms of energy. • Energy is the ability to cause change.

  12. How can energy be stored? • In moving objects – kinetic energy • In stretching objects – elastic potential energy • In gravitational fields – gravitational potential energy • In hot objects – thermal energy • In electric fields– electrical potential energy • In chemical bonds – chemical potential energy • In electrons orbiting atoms – atomic energy • In the nucleus of an atom – nuclear energy

  13. Energy Bar Graphs and System Schemas Energy bar graphs and system schemas build on the conceptual foundation established by energy pie charts, but organize the information in a way that strongly suggests the conservation of energy equation. Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie. Draw a set of four energy pie charts for this situation.

  14. EK EK EK Echem Echem Echem Echem Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie.

  15. Definition of “Force” A push or pull Energy exerted on an object. Power exerted on an object. Something that changes the motion of an object A resistance.

  16. EK EK EK Echem Echem Echem Echem Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie.

  17. Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie. EK EK EK Echem Echem Echem Echem Beneath each pie chart, draw a bar graph representing the same information. Use one bar for each wedge of your pie.

  18. EK EK EK Echem Echem Echem Echem Echem Echem Echem Echem EK EK EK Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie.

  19. Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie. Echem Echem Echem Echem EK EK EK With bar graphs, we are concerned principally with the initial and final energy storage. So erase your middle two bar graphs and replace them with a system schema.

  20. earth surface object person Echem Echem EK Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie.

  21. Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie. earth surface object person Echem Echem EK Each line in a system schema represents an interaction between two objects, but only some of those interactions involve a transfer of energy. If energy is transferred, add an arrowhead to show which way the energy flows.

  22. EK EK EK Echem Echem Echem Echem earth surface object working Echem Echem EK person Example: A person exerts a constant force on a box initially at rest on a horizontal, frictionless surface and pushes it for a distance of several meters. NOTE: consider that it starts from rest and is still being pushed even in the last pie. When a force causes a transfer of energy, that is called working.

  23. H2O conducting metal Etherm-metal Etherm-metal Etherm-H2O Etherm-H2O Energy can also be transferred by conducting. A piece of hot metal is dropped into a well-insulated glass of water.

  24. electron Uelec + KE = Eelectron Uelec + KE = Eelectron Ephoton radiating photon Ephoton Energy can also be transferred by radiating. A photon of light interacts with an atom, causing its electron to jump up an energy level.

  25. Color Coding Electric Circuits Yellow = medium • Each wire in an electric circuit is assigned a color according to the voltage in that wire. Red = greatest voltage in the circuit Orange = next greatest Green = next least Blue = least voltage in the circuit. • Any wire or connected wires must have the same color code because wires have too little resistance to sustain a voltage difference. • All differences in voltage, and therefore differences in color must occur across devices such as batteries or light bulbs.

  26. Bulb Rays and Arrow Tails •  The more rays drawn out of a light bulb, the brighter it is. • The more tails drawn on an arrow representing electric current, the greater the current.

  27. Physics Education Research (PER) shows a real crisis in understanding • What does it mean when students can readily solve the quantitative problem at left, yet not answer the conceptual question at right? Bulbs A, B and C are identical. What happens to the brightness of bulbs A and B when switch S is closed? For the circuit above, determine the current in the 4  resistor and the potentialdifference between P and Q.

  28. PER shows conclusively that textbooks, lucid lectures and lots of repetitive problem-solving are not effective in remedying the situation. • Before physics instruction, students hold naïve beliefs about mechanics which are incompatible with Newtonian concepts in most respects. • Such beliefs are a major determinant of student performance in introductory physics. • These beliefs are strongly held and often unconscious.  • Students do not change their deeply held beliefs until they are conscious of those beliefs, are aware that those beliefs do not effectively explain the world, and have a viable alternative.

  29. How do you change a mind? • Become conscious of existing beliefs • Be able to articulate and defend those beliefs • Confront evidence that tests those beliefs • Evaluate alternatives • Learn to catch yourself slipping back into your pre-conceptions (cycling back to evidence) Diagrams, graphs and Socratic questioning are components of an instructional method that produces better results.

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