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Zohar, Asnat R.; Levy, Sharona T. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2021
Embodied cognition theories view sensorimotor activity as fundamental to learning, knowing, and reasoning. To investigate the role of physical movement in conceptual learning, we developed and explored an Embodied Learning Interactive Chemistry environment (ELI-Chem). The ELI-Chem learning environment includes a computer simulation, a device for…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Physics, Motion, Concept Formation
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McElhaney, Kevin W.; Linn, Marcia C. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2011
This study examines how students' experimentation with a virtual environment contributes to their understanding of a complex, realistic inquiry problem. We designed a week-long, technology-enhanced inquiry unit on car collisions. The unit uses new technologies to log students' experimentation choices. Physics students (n = 148) in six diverse high…
Descriptors: Investigations, Rhetoric, Pretests Posttests, Physics
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Quellmalz, Edys S.; Timms, Michael J.; Silberglitt, Matt D.; Buckley, Barbara C. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2012
This article reports on the collaboration of six states to study how simulation-based science assessments can become transformative components of multi-level, balanced state science assessment systems. The project studied the psychometric quality, feasibility, and utility of simulation-based science assessments designed to serve formative purposes…
Descriptors: State Programs, Educational Assessment, Simulated Environment, Grade 6
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Bryce, T. G. K.; MacMillan, K. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2009
Researchers and practitioners alike express concerns about the conceptual difficulties associated with the concepts of momentum and kinetic energy currently taught in school physics. This article presents an in-depth analysis of the treatment given to them in 44 published textbooks written for UK secondary school certificate courses. This is set…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Textbooks, Kinetics, Physics
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Marshall, Jill A.; Carrejo, David J. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2008
We present results of an investigation of university students' development of mathematical models of motion in a physical science course for preservice teachers and graduate students in science and mathematics education. Although some students were familiar with the standard concepts of position, velocity, and acceleration from physics classes,…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Graduate Students, Mathematics Education, Mathematical Models
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de Jong, Ton; Martin, Ernesto; Zamarro, Jose-Miguel; Esquembre, Francisco; Swaak, Janine; van Joolingen, Wouter R. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1999
Discusses a case study on discovery learning with a computer simulation environment in the physics domain of collisions. Finds that providing assignments with the simulation improves students' performance on one aspect of an intuitive-knowledge test. Contains 43 references. (Author/WRM)
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Computer Simulation, Foreign Countries, Higher Education
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Eryilmaz, Ali – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2002
Investigates the effects of conceptual assignments and conceptual change discussions on high school students' achievement and misconceptions about force and motion. Analyzes pretest and posttest data from the Force Misconception and Force Achievement Tests (FMFAT). Discusses the effects on the conceptual change discussion on reducing…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Force, Learning Processes, Misconceptions
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Hynd, Cynthia; And Others – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1994
Ninth- and 10th-grade students (n=310) participated in a study designed to determine the effect of three variables (viewing a demonstration, engaging in student to student discussion, and/or reading a refutational text) on conceptual change in physics. Results revealed that reading the refutational text helped students change their intuitive ideas…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Concept Formation, Educational Strategies, High Schools
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Andaloro, G.; And Others – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1994
Describes a study designed to identify the various reasoning procedures used by students (n=229) in comparing the average velocities of two moving bodies; compare the differences among the procedures used by students at different school levels; and analyze the relationship between automatic and human diagnoses to identify diagnostic errors of the…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Educational Research, Epistemology, High Schools
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Cahyadi, M. Veronica; Butler, Philip H. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2004
This study investigates the understanding of 18 first-year undergraduate students when simultaneously presented with two contrasting dynamical situations: the idealized (without air resistance) and real-world cases of balls being dropped or thrown. Previous work has shown that getting students to recognize flaws in their mental models helps them…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Higher Education, Motion, Teaching Methods
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Seiler, Gale; Tobin, Kenneth; Sokolic, Joseph – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2001
Presents a study that took place in an inner-city neighborhood school populated mainly by African American students characterized by poverty. Explores the discourse and practices of students and three co-teachers as a curriculum was enacted to provide opportunities for students to learn about the physics of motion through designing, building, and…
Descriptors: Design, Educational Technology, Equal Education, Hands on Science
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Weller, Herman G. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1995
Investigated a microcomputer-based system for the diagnosis and remediation of three Aristotelian alternative conceptions of force and motion held by eighth-grade physical science students. Reports that computer simulations exemplifying canonical conceptions facilitate alteration of students' naive conceptions to a significant degree. Suggests…
Descriptors: Computer Uses in Education, Force, Grade 8, Microcomputers
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Walsh, E.; And Others – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1993
Students' understanding of the concept of relative speed is described. A variety of ways of understanding relative speed and of viewing a problem that dealt with this concept were uncovered. The results are used to suggest ways for teachers to proceed in assisting students to enhance their understanding of relative speed. (PR)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Educational Research, High Schools, Kinetics
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Eckstein, Shulamith G.; Shemesh, Michal – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1993
A study (n=631) of children's ideas on motion of objects is reported. On three items of a four-part questionnaire, responses changed as the children matured, passing through distinct, successive stages with respect to their conceptual understanding. If teaching strategies to overcome misconceptions are to be effective, they must be appropriate to…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Developmental Stages, Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education
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Tao, Ping-Kee; Gunstone, Richard F. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1999
Investigates the conceptual-change process in grade 10 students during a computer-supported physics unit. Finds that many students vacillated between alternative and scientific conceptions from one context to another during instruction, and those few students who did exhibit context-independent and stable conceptual change appeared able to accept…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, Computer Uses in Education, Concept Formation, Epistemology
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