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Irina Braun; Nicole Graulich – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2024
Resonance is a crucial concept in Organic Chemistry that enables both deriving chemical properties from molecular structures and predicting reactions by considering electron density distribution. Despite its importance for problem-solving and learning success, learners encounter various difficulties with this concept. Although prior research…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Chemistry, Organic Chemistry, Scientific Concepts
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Kranz, David; Schween, Michael; Graulich, Nicole – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2023
Reaction mechanisms are a core component of organic chemistry. Being able to handle these mechanisms is a central skill for students in this discipline. Diagnosing and fostering mechanistic reasoning is hence an important branch of chemistry education research. When it comes to reasoning about mechanisms, students often experience difficulties…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique), Thinking Skills
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Eckhard, Julia; Rodemer, Marc; Langner, Axel; Bernholt, Sascha; Graulich, Nicole – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2022
Research in Organic Chemistry education has revealed students' challenges in mechanistic reasoning. When solving mechanistic tasks, students tend to focus on explicit surface features, apply fragmented conceptual knowledge, rely on rote-memorization and, hence, often struggle to build well-grounded causal explanations. When taking a resource…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Education, Problem Solving, Teaching Methods
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Keiner, Liz; Graulich, Nicole – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2021
Understanding ongoing chemical processes in the laboratory requires constant shifting between different representational levels--the macroscopic, submicroscopic, and symbolic levels--and analysis of the various mechanistic features of each of these levels. Thus, the ability to explain observations of chemical phenomena with regard to their…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Laboratory Training, Scaffolding (Teaching Technique)
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Lieber, Leonie; Graulich, Nicole – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2022
Building scientific arguments is a central ability for all scientists regardless of their specific domain. In organic chemistry, building arguments is a necessary skill to estimate reaction processes in consideration of the reactivities of reaction centres or the chemical and physical properties. Moreover, building arguments for multiple reaction…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry, Persuasive Discourse
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Hermanns, Jolanda; Keller, David – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
In this paper the development, use, and evaluation of tasks based on the construct of school-related content knowledge are described. The tasks were used in seminars on organic chemistry for bachelor and master preservice chemistry teachers at a German university. For the evaluation a questionnaire with open and closed items was used. The tasks…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Knowledge Level, Preservice Teacher Education
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Hermanns, Jolanda – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
The course design "Training OC" for training the application of basic concepts consists of four topics: formula language, structure-property relations, reaction mechanisms, and complex tasks that the students should solve with the conceptual knowledge they acquired in the first three topics. A main goal of the course was to enable the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, College Science, Undergraduate Study, Organic Chemistry
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Graulich, Nicole; Hedtrich, Sebastian; Harzenetter, René – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2019
Learning to interpret organic structures not as an arrangement of lines and letters but, rather, as a representation of chemical entities is a challenge in organic chemistry. To successfully deal with the variety of molecules or mechanistic representations, a learner needs to understand how a representation depicts domain-specific information.…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry, Teaching Methods, Scientific Concepts
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Rodemer, Marc; Eckhard, Julia; Graulich, Nicole; Bernholt, Sascha – International Journal of Science Education, 2021
Research in science education agrees that one of the key challenges of learners in the discipline is certainly connecting domain-specific representations to the underlying concepts. One way of supporting students to make applicable connections is using purposefully designed highlighting techniques in multimedia instructions. In order to examine…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry, Video Technology, Scientific Concepts
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Keiner, Liz; Graulich, Nicole – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2020
Chemists refer to chemical phenomena on different representational levels--macroscopic, symbolic, and submicroscopic--which are directly related and connected to each other. Especially in the laboratory, students have to reason about various mechanistic features at the submicroscopic level and connect them in a meaningful way to make sense of the…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Organic Chemistry, Science Laboratories, Preservice Teachers
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Bicak, Besim Enes; Borchert, Cornelia Eleonore; Höner, Kerstin – Education Sciences, 2021
Developing scientific reasoning (SR) is a central goal of science-teacher education worldwide. On a fine-grained level, SR competency can be subdivided into at least six skills: "formulating research questions," "generating hypotheses," "planning experiments," "observing and measuring," "preparing data…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Late Adolescents, Preservice Teachers, Preservice Teacher Education
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Caspari, I.; Kranz, D.; Graulich, N. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2018
Research in organic chemistry education has revealed that students often rely on rote memorization when learning mechanisms. Not much is known about student productive resources for causal reasoning. To investigate incipient stages of student causal reasoning about single mechanistic steps of organic reactions, we developed a theoretical framework…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Science Instruction, Logical Thinking, Scientific Principles
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Eissen, Marco – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2012
"Sustainability" is a very general term and the question arises how to specify it within daily laboratory work. In this regard, appropriate metrics could support a socially acceptable, ecological and economic product development. The application of metrics for sustainability should be strengthened in education, because they do not belong…
Descriptors: Feedback (Response), Plastics, Action Research, Chemistry
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Graulich, Nicole; Tiemann, Rudiger; Schreiner, Peter R. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2012
We investigate the efficiency of domain-specific heuristic strategies in mastering and predicting pericyclic six-electron rearrangements. Based on recent research findings on these types of reactions a new concept has been developed that should help students identify and describe six-electron rearrangements more readily in complex molecules. The…
Descriptors: Organic Chemistry, Heuristics, College Science, Undergraduate Students
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Schmidt, Hans-Jurgen; Kaufmann, Birgit; Treagust, David F. – Chemistry Education Research and Practice, 2009
In introductory chemistry courses students are presented with the model that matter is composed of particles, and that weak forces of attraction exist between them. This model is used to interpret phenomena such as solubility and melting points, and aids in understanding the changes in states of matter as opposed to chemical reactions. We…
Descriptors: Molecular Structure, Models, Scientific Concepts, Scientific Principles