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Arkadiy, Leonov – European Journal of Physics, 2009
The problem of obtaining the apparent equation of motion and shape of a moving body from its arbitrary given equation of motion in special relativity is considered. Also the inverse problem of obtaining the body's equation of motion from a known equation of motion of its image is discussed. Some examples of this problem solution are considered. As…
Descriptors: Physics, Motion, Science Education, Problem Solving
Halloun, Ibrahim – 1995
Models occupy the content core of physics, and modeling is a major process for constructing and employing physics knowledge. A model is characterized by its domain, composition, structure, behavior, and organization. Problem solving is a schematic modeling process consisting of model selection, construction, validation, analysis, and deployment. A…
Descriptors: Mechanics (Physics), Models, Physics, Problem Solving

Saxena, A. B. – Physics Education (India), 1988
The misconceptions related to the concepts of force and acceleration among college students are explored. Misconceptions are identified and their occurrence among a large percentage of students are observed. Provided are some implications for physics teaching and an eight-item test. (Author/YP)
Descriptors: College Science, Concept Formation, Force, Foreign Countries
Peterson, Ivars – Science News, 1989
An analogy from the game of baseball can be used to examine the philosophy involved in statistics surrounding quantum mechanical events. The "Strong Baseball Principle" is proposed and discussed. (CW)
Descriptors: Atomic Structure, College Science, Higher Education, Mathematics
Dickie, Leslie – 1994
The objectives of this exploratory study were to determine: (1) the approach to learning of physics students (N=142) at John Abbott College (Quebec, Canada) as determined by the Study Process Questionnaire; (2) the intellectual demands of quizzes, tests, and final exams in physics using a scheme derived from Bloom's taxonomy; and (3) the…
Descriptors: Achievement Tests, Electricity, Evaluation, Foreign Countries

Jagger, Janet M. – Mathematics in School, 1987
Described are responses of first-year college students to questions regarding acceleration. Responses regarding acceleration and possible reasons for student errors are discussed. (RH)
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), Mathematics Instruction, Mechanics (Physics), Physics
Brown, David E.; Clement, John – 1989
In most research that investigates factors influencing the success of analogies in instruction, an underlying assumption is that students have little or no knowledge of the target situation. It is interesting to ask what factors influence the success of analogies when students believe they understand the target situation. If this understanding is…
Descriptors: Analogy, Case Studies, Concept Formation, Force

Brown, David E. – Physics Education, 1989
Reports various misconceptions of Newton's third law obtained from interviews and written tests of high school students. Suggests putting emphasis on the third law in physics teaching. Ten references are listed. (YP)
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Fundamental Concepts, Mechanics (Physics), Misconceptions

Sathe, Dileep V. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1989
Discusses the correctness of the directions of acceleration at various points in a pendulum problem shown in Reif (1987). Provides the author's responses to the comments on the problem. (YP)
Descriptors: Acceleration (Physics), Illustrations, Mechanics (Physics), Misconceptions

Taber, Keith S. – Research in Science and Technological Education, 1991
Students in their first weeks of secondary school were asked to select from a list those topics they would be interested in studying in science. Gender differences were found in that boys predominately selected topics with a mechanical connection, whereas girls predominantly selected topics related to human biology. (Author)
Descriptors: Biology, Course Selection (Students), Human Body, Mechanics (Physics)

Ploetzner, Rolf; And Others – European Journal of Psychology of Education, 1990
Discusses the artificial-intelligence-based microworld DiBi and MULEDS, a multilevel diagnosis system. Developed to adapt tutoring style to the individual learner. Explains that DiBi sets up a learning environment, and simulates elastic impacts as a subtopic of classical mechanics, and supporting reasoning on different levels of mental domain…
Descriptors: Artificial Intelligence, Computer Uses in Education, Educational Technology, Learning Strategies
Champagne, Audrey B.; And Others – Educational Psychologist, 1983
Physics learning studies demonstrate that students' pre-instructional world knowledge is often logically antagonistic to the principles of Newtonian mechanics taught in introductory physics courses. Under these conditions psychological theory predicts that learning will be inhibited, a prediction consistent with both the experiences of physics…
Descriptors: Cognitive Processes, College Science, Higher Education, Instructional Design
Dufresne, Robert J. – 1988
One approach to the study of cognitive processes highlights the distinctions between expert and novice problem solvers. This approach attempts to discover how experts and novices differ in the way they organize, retain and use domain related knowledge. It appears to some that what is learned from expert-novice research can help teachers to teach…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, College Science, Higher Education
Hardiman, Pamela Thibodeau; And Others – 1988
This investigation examined the relationship between problem solving ability and the criteria used to decide whether two classical mechanics problems could be solved similarly. The investigators began by comparing experts and novices on a similarity judgment task and found that experts predominantly relied on the problems' deep structure in…
Descriptors: Cognitive Development, Cognitive Processes, College Science, Higher Education
Clement, John – 1987
Reviewed are findings on misconceptions in mechanics and their instructional implications. Many misconceptions are widespread and resistant to change but students have useful intuitions and reasoning processes that could be used more fully. One strategy for dealing with misconceptions is described. It stresses anchoring intuitions, analogical…
Descriptors: Analogy, College Science, Concept Formation, Higher Education