Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant

A common hope of many physics educators and researchers is that students leave the course with a stronger sense that physics is relevant to them than when they entered the course. Multiple survey measures have attempted to measure shifts in students’ beliefs on the relevance of physics but frequentl...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Abhilash Nair, Vashti Sawtelle
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2019-09-01
Series:Physical Review Physics Education Research
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.15.020121
id doaj-6d52e7331e0447f1998699be77ab131e
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6d52e7331e0447f1998699be77ab131e2020-11-25T01:12:21ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review Physics Education Research2469-98962019-09-0115202012110.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.15.020121Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevantAbhilash NairVashti SawtelleA common hope of many physics educators and researchers is that students leave the course with a stronger sense that physics is relevant to them than when they entered the course. Multiple survey measures have attempted to measure shifts in students’ beliefs on the relevance of physics but frequently the results show a negative shift in students’ beliefs and are often reported as a failure of students to “see the relevance.” We challenge this view by highlighting the limitations of attitudinal and epistemological surveys’ ability to probe relevance. We then articulate a more expansive view of relevance using ecological systems theory that serves as a lens we apply to analyze students’ experiences. Instead of deficit-framing students’ abilities or challenging their beliefs about the relevance of physics, we show how incorporating their rich disciplinary experiences can make physics classrooms truly more relevant.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.15.020121
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Abhilash Nair
Vashti Sawtelle
spellingShingle Abhilash Nair
Vashti Sawtelle
Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant
Physical Review Physics Education Research
author_facet Abhilash Nair
Vashti Sawtelle
author_sort Abhilash Nair
title Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant
title_short Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant
title_full Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant
title_fullStr Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant
title_full_unstemmed Operationalizing relevance in physics education: Using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant
title_sort operationalizing relevance in physics education: using a systems view to expand our conception of making physics relevant
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review Physics Education Research
issn 2469-9896
publishDate 2019-09-01
description A common hope of many physics educators and researchers is that students leave the course with a stronger sense that physics is relevant to them than when they entered the course. Multiple survey measures have attempted to measure shifts in students’ beliefs on the relevance of physics but frequently the results show a negative shift in students’ beliefs and are often reported as a failure of students to “see the relevance.” We challenge this view by highlighting the limitations of attitudinal and epistemological surveys’ ability to probe relevance. We then articulate a more expansive view of relevance using ecological systems theory that serves as a lens we apply to analyze students’ experiences. Instead of deficit-framing students’ abilities or challenging their beliefs about the relevance of physics, we show how incorporating their rich disciplinary experiences can make physics classrooms truly more relevant.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.15.020121
work_keys_str_mv AT abhilashnair operationalizingrelevanceinphysicseducationusingasystemsviewtoexpandourconceptionofmakingphysicsrelevant
AT vashtisawtelle operationalizingrelevanceinphysicseducationusingasystemsviewtoexpandourconceptionofmakingphysicsrelevant
_version_ 1715829298640715776