Title: Transfer of Scientific Abilities
1Transfer of Scientific Abilities
- Eugenia Etkina, Alan Van Heuvelen, Anna Karelina,
Maria Ruibal-Villasenor, David Rosengrant, Cindy
Hmelo-Silver, and Rebecca Jordan - Rutgers University
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- http//www.islephysics.net
- http//paer.rutgers.edu/scientificabilities
- Project funded by the NSF grant DRL 0241078
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2 Goals of our courses
- Workplace
- National Reports, accreditation of schools of
engineering (college) - Recent NRC report (K-12)
- Goals for Courses Student learning in physics
should be focused on developing science process
abilities while acquiring and applying physics
knowledge.
3 Curriculum Investigative Science Learning
Environment
My observations (data)
Patterns
more
Multiple explanations, mechanisms or
relationships between physical quantities
Revise explanation
Assumptions
Testing experimentsDoes outcome match
prediction based on explanation/relationship?
Predictions
no
Applications
4 Scientific abilities
- The ability to represent physical processes in
multiple ways - The ability to design an experimental
investigation - The ability to collect and analyze data
- The ability to devise and test a qualitative
explanation (mechanism) or a quantitative
relationship - The ability to modify an explanation (mechanism)
or a quantitative relationship in light of new
data - The ability to evaluate experimental predictions
and outcomes, conceptual claims, problems
solutions and models - The ability to communicate.
5Transfer
Models of transfer Direct Application (Gick and
Holyoak) Preparation for Future Learning
(Bransford and Schwartz) Actor-oriented transfer
(Lobato) Transfer of situated learning (Greeno)
- What promotes transfer
- Student-centered learning
- Acquisition of deep and meaningful knowledge
- Pattern recognition among cases
- Induction of general schema
- Meta-cognitive reflection
- Contrasting cases
- Social context
6Transfer project
Experimental and control group Both are in the
ISLE course Large group meetings and recitation
Week 1-10
Comparison
Designing a physics experiment in an unknown area
of physics
Week 12
Designing a biology experiment
Week 13
Solving scientific-abilities related exam problems
Week 5, 11, 15
Solving regular exam problems
7Lab experiments
You need to determine the elastic potential
energy stored in the Hot wheels launcher in each
position.
DESIGN
NON-DESIGN
- Start by making a rough plan. Make sure that you
use two methods. - Write an outline of your procedure with a labeled
sketch. - Identify the quantities you will measure and how
you will measure them. - Devise the mathematical procedure. Decide what
your assumptions are and how they might affect
the outcome. - Perform the experiment and record the data
- Estimate the range within which you know the
value of each energy.
Procedure Measure the mass of the car. Launch
the car vertically starting at one of the
launching positions. Measure the maximum height
the car reaches to find the elastic energy in the
launcher.. ..Repeat height measurement four
times. Take the average of the four vertical
distance measurements and calculate the standard
deviation. Analysis Construct a work-energy bar
chart for the process starting with the car
resting on the stretched launcher and ending when
the car is at its maximum elevation. Apply the
generalized work-energy equation
8Time Spent on the lab activities Weeks 1 through
10
Time (min.)
9Exam data
10Findings for this part of the project
- Experimental group spent more time in the labs
engaging in sense-making activities - Experimental group did significantly better on
physics questions related to the labs - Experimental group did the same or better on
regular exam problems - At the end of the course the experimental group
did significantly better on all exam problems
(multiple choice or open response) the effect
size of 0.3. - The exams did not assess transfer of scientific
abilities. - The next two talks describe this part of the
study - do not leave!