Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student Misconceptions

A number of educational researchers have developed pedagogical approaches that involve the teacher in discovering and helping to correct misconceptions that students bring to their study of their subject matter. During the last decade, several computer systems have been developed to support teaching...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Tara Madhyastha, Steven Tanimoto
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Ubiquity Press 2009-02-01
Series:Journal of Interactive Media in Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jime.open.ac.uk/articles/154
id doaj-2b48518f25794d178fa251eadfa2350f
record_format Article
spelling doaj-2b48518f25794d178fa251eadfa2350f2020-11-24T20:44:14ZengUbiquity PressJournal of Interactive Media in Education1365-893X2009-02-012009110.5334/2009-1220Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student MisconceptionsTara Madhyastha0Steven Tanimoto1Facet Innovations, LLC., 1314 N.E. 43rd St., Suite 207, Seattle WA 98105University of Washington, Dept. Computer Sci. & Engineering., Box 352350, Seattle, WA 98195A number of educational researchers have developed pedagogical approaches that involve the teacher in discovering and helping to correct misconceptions that students bring to their study of their subject matter. During the last decade, several computer systems have been developed to support teaching and learning using this kind of approach. A central conceptual construct used by these systems is the "facet" of understanding: an atomic diagnosable unit of belief. A formidable challenge to applying such pedagogical approaches to new topic areas is the task of discovering and organizing the facets for the new subject area. This paper presents a taxonomy of misconceptions and a methodology for going about the task of preparing a database of facets. Important issues include the generality and diagnosability of facets, granularity of facets, and their placement on a scale of problematicity. Examples are drawn from the subjects of physics and computer science and in the context of two computer systems: the Diagnoser and INFACT.Editors: Patrick McAndrew (Open University, UK).Reviewers: Paul Horwitz (Concord Consortium, USA) and Ruth Thomas (Jelsim Partnership, UK).https://jime.open.ac.uk/articles/154educational assessment, misconception, teaching, facet, ontology, concept, pedagogical knowledge, facetbase, diagnosis, preconception, learning environment, computer-assisted instruction
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Tara Madhyastha
Steven Tanimoto
spellingShingle Tara Madhyastha
Steven Tanimoto
Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student Misconceptions
Journal of Interactive Media in Education
educational assessment, misconception, teaching, facet, ontology, concept, pedagogical knowledge, facetbase, diagnosis, preconception, learning environment, computer-assisted instruction
author_facet Tara Madhyastha
Steven Tanimoto
author_sort Tara Madhyastha
title Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student Misconceptions
title_short Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student Misconceptions
title_full Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student Misconceptions
title_fullStr Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student Misconceptions
title_full_unstemmed Faring with Facets: Building and Using Databases of Student Misconceptions
title_sort faring with facets: building and using databases of student misconceptions
publisher Ubiquity Press
series Journal of Interactive Media in Education
issn 1365-893X
publishDate 2009-02-01
description A number of educational researchers have developed pedagogical approaches that involve the teacher in discovering and helping to correct misconceptions that students bring to their study of their subject matter. During the last decade, several computer systems have been developed to support teaching and learning using this kind of approach. A central conceptual construct used by these systems is the "facet" of understanding: an atomic diagnosable unit of belief. A formidable challenge to applying such pedagogical approaches to new topic areas is the task of discovering and organizing the facets for the new subject area. This paper presents a taxonomy of misconceptions and a methodology for going about the task of preparing a database of facets. Important issues include the generality and diagnosability of facets, granularity of facets, and their placement on a scale of problematicity. Examples are drawn from the subjects of physics and computer science and in the context of two computer systems: the Diagnoser and INFACT.Editors: Patrick McAndrew (Open University, UK).Reviewers: Paul Horwitz (Concord Consortium, USA) and Ruth Thomas (Jelsim Partnership, UK).
topic educational assessment, misconception, teaching, facet, ontology, concept, pedagogical knowledge, facetbase, diagnosis, preconception, learning environment, computer-assisted instruction
url https://jime.open.ac.uk/articles/154
work_keys_str_mv AT taramadhyastha faringwithfacetsbuildingandusingdatabasesofstudentmisconceptions
AT steventanimoto faringwithfacetsbuildingandusingdatabasesofstudentmisconceptions
_version_ 1716818019605282816