STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their Difficulties

Majority of science students are facing different problems in applying their calculus knowledge to physics courses. Researchers started to develop an integrated approach to address this problem however, many schools are still teaching calculus and physics as two separate subjects. Moreover, there ha...

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Main Author: Jerrie-Marie Q. Quimson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Research Synergy Foundation 2021-05-01
Series:International Journal on Research in STEM Education
Online Access:https://journals.researchsynergypress.com/index.php/ijrse/article/view/503
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spelling doaj-45a2280d013d46a3b301327de7f032a02021-08-18T13:15:25ZengResearch Synergy FoundationInternational Journal on Research in STEM Education2721-32422721-29042021-05-0131364610.31098/ijrse.v3i1.503438STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their DifficultiesJerrie-Marie Q. Quimson0De La Salle UniversityMajority of science students are facing different problems in applying their calculus knowledge to physics courses. Researchers started to develop an integrated approach to address this problem however, many schools are still teaching calculus and physics as two separate subjects. Moreover, there has been no significant research on senior high school students' transfer of learning and difficulties in calculus-based physics subjects. It is crucial because this is when the students first experience applying calculus in a physics context. Hence, the study investigated the engagement of senior high school STEM students to horizontal transfer from Basic Calculus to General Physics subjects and the difficulties they experience in solving calculus-based-physics problems. A correlational study research design was employed to explore the relationship between the students’ physics and calculus performance using a physics worksheet. Both qualitative and quantitative methods were also employed to determine the difficulties of the students in calculus-based-physics problems. The Pearson correlation revealed that there is a significant positive correlation between the students’ physics and calculus performance. Although this could not serve as strong evidence of transfer, this strong correlation implies that senior high school STEM students were able to construct the similarities between the calculus-based physics problems and their calculus schema. As revealed in the questionnaire and the students’ responses in the worksheet and interview, students have difficulty in solving calculus-based physics problems in terms of identifying the variable that needs to be integrated, setting-up the limits of integration, evaluating the limits of integral, and identifying the appropriate rules of integration and applying it in solving the physics problem. These difficulties are rooted in the fact that students have little experience applying calculus in word problems, especially in the physics context.https://journals.researchsynergypress.com/index.php/ijrse/article/view/503
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jerrie-Marie Q. Quimson
spellingShingle Jerrie-Marie Q. Quimson
STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their Difficulties
International Journal on Research in STEM Education
author_facet Jerrie-Marie Q. Quimson
author_sort Jerrie-Marie Q. Quimson
title STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their Difficulties
title_short STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their Difficulties
title_full STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their Difficulties
title_fullStr STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their Difficulties
title_full_unstemmed STEM Students' Engagement in Horizontal Transfer from Calculus to Physics and their Difficulties
title_sort stem students' engagement in horizontal transfer from calculus to physics and their difficulties
publisher Research Synergy Foundation
series International Journal on Research in STEM Education
issn 2721-3242
2721-2904
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Majority of science students are facing different problems in applying their calculus knowledge to physics courses. Researchers started to develop an integrated approach to address this problem however, many schools are still teaching calculus and physics as two separate subjects. Moreover, there has been no significant research on senior high school students' transfer of learning and difficulties in calculus-based physics subjects. It is crucial because this is when the students first experience applying calculus in a physics context. Hence, the study investigated the engagement of senior high school STEM students to horizontal transfer from Basic Calculus to General Physics subjects and the difficulties they experience in solving calculus-based-physics problems. A correlational study research design was employed to explore the relationship between the students’ physics and calculus performance using a physics worksheet. Both qualitative and quantitative methods were also employed to determine the difficulties of the students in calculus-based-physics problems. The Pearson correlation revealed that there is a significant positive correlation between the students’ physics and calculus performance. Although this could not serve as strong evidence of transfer, this strong correlation implies that senior high school STEM students were able to construct the similarities between the calculus-based physics problems and their calculus schema. As revealed in the questionnaire and the students’ responses in the worksheet and interview, students have difficulty in solving calculus-based physics problems in terms of identifying the variable that needs to be integrated, setting-up the limits of integration, evaluating the limits of integral, and identifying the appropriate rules of integration and applying it in solving the physics problem. These difficulties are rooted in the fact that students have little experience applying calculus in word problems, especially in the physics context.
url https://journals.researchsynergypress.com/index.php/ijrse/article/view/503
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