Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday Phenomena

Experience and intuition may help explain everyday phenomena. However, physics concepts cannot be induced directly from them. Learning physics requires an examination of the ideas of scientifically constructed theoretical frameworks, explaining coherently organized physics concepts. This research ex...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Nilüfer Didiş Körhasan, Derya Kaltakçı Gürel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ICASE 2019-11-01
Series:Science Education International
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.icaseonline.net/journal/index.php/sei/article/view/151
id doaj-6efe621950db4e23b7af13c9176797c8
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6efe621950db4e23b7af13c9176797c82020-11-25T04:02:18ZengICASEScience Education International2077-23272019-11-0130429830910.33828/sei.v30.i4.7Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday PhenomenaNilüfer Didiş Körhasan0Derya Kaltakçı Gürel1Department of Mathematics and Science Education, Faculty of Education, Zonguldak Bülent Ecevit University, Zonguldak, TurkeyDepartment of Mathematics and Science Education, Faculty of Education, Kocaeli University, Kocaeli, TurkeyExperience and intuition may help explain everyday phenomena. However, physics concepts cannot be induced directly from them. Learning physics requires an examination of the ideas of scientifically constructed theoretical frameworks, explaining coherently organized physics concepts. This research examined student teachers’ physics knowledge in terms of their everyday explanations and physical reasoning pertaining to everyday concepts. The way in which sources of knowledge influence student teachers’ physics learning was also examined. With this aim, a test comprising eight questions – with each question corresponding to an everyday context examining students’ everyday explanations, their reasoning, and epistemologies – were developed. By convenience sampling of two universities in Turkey, the test was offered to 360 student teachers who will teach primary and elementary level science in the future. After the relevant t-tests and variance analyses, the results indicated that there was context-sensitivity with respect to physical explanations. In addition, in all of the contexts, propagated and fabricated knowledge allowed the highest scores in each context despite the different kinds of sources stated by student teachers. Educators should have insights about the nature of students’ knowledge and reasoning, and they should design their science-related courses by considering students’ epistemologies to remove the hidden barrier between every day and formal concepts.http://www.icaseonline.net/journal/index.php/sei/article/view/151physics educationeveryday conceptionsepistemology
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Nilüfer Didiş Körhasan
Derya Kaltakçı Gürel
spellingShingle Nilüfer Didiş Körhasan
Derya Kaltakçı Gürel
Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday Phenomena
Science Education International
physics education
everyday conceptions
epistemology
author_facet Nilüfer Didiş Körhasan
Derya Kaltakçı Gürel
author_sort Nilüfer Didiş Körhasan
title Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday Phenomena
title_short Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday Phenomena
title_full Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday Phenomena
title_fullStr Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday Phenomena
title_full_unstemmed Student Teachers’ Physics Knowledge and Sources of Knowledge to Explain Everyday Phenomena
title_sort student teachers’ physics knowledge and sources of knowledge to explain everyday phenomena
publisher ICASE
series Science Education International
issn 2077-2327
publishDate 2019-11-01
description Experience and intuition may help explain everyday phenomena. However, physics concepts cannot be induced directly from them. Learning physics requires an examination of the ideas of scientifically constructed theoretical frameworks, explaining coherently organized physics concepts. This research examined student teachers’ physics knowledge in terms of their everyday explanations and physical reasoning pertaining to everyday concepts. The way in which sources of knowledge influence student teachers’ physics learning was also examined. With this aim, a test comprising eight questions – with each question corresponding to an everyday context examining students’ everyday explanations, their reasoning, and epistemologies – were developed. By convenience sampling of two universities in Turkey, the test was offered to 360 student teachers who will teach primary and elementary level science in the future. After the relevant t-tests and variance analyses, the results indicated that there was context-sensitivity with respect to physical explanations. In addition, in all of the contexts, propagated and fabricated knowledge allowed the highest scores in each context despite the different kinds of sources stated by student teachers. Educators should have insights about the nature of students’ knowledge and reasoning, and they should design their science-related courses by considering students’ epistemologies to remove the hidden barrier between every day and formal concepts.
topic physics education
everyday conceptions
epistemology
url http://www.icaseonline.net/journal/index.php/sei/article/view/151
work_keys_str_mv AT niluferdidiskorhasan studentteachersphysicsknowledgeandsourcesofknowledgetoexplaineverydayphenomena
AT deryakaltakcıgurel studentteachersphysicsknowledgeandsourcesofknowledgetoexplaineverydayphenomena
_version_ 1724443410912247808