How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain)
This paper analyzes the impact of fieldwork on the development of students’ mental models concerning glaciers and their effects on the landscape. Data were collected by means of an open-ended questionnaire that was administered to 279 pre-service teachers before and after an educational fi...
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doaj-83bce1887d784fe7b9896b4b76da92382020-11-25T01:37:20ZengMDPI AGGeosciences2076-32632019-05-019523810.3390/geosciences9050238geosciences9050238How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain)Diego Corrochano0Alejandro Gómez-Gonçalves1Department of Mathematics Education and Experimental Sciences Education, University of Salamanca, 37008 Salamanca, SpainDepartment of Geography, University of Salamanca, 37008 Salamanca, SpainThis paper analyzes the impact of fieldwork on the development of students’ mental models concerning glaciers and their effects on the landscape. Data were collected by means of an open-ended questionnaire that was administered to 279 pre-service teachers before and after an educational field trip, which analyzed its impact on short-term and long-term outcomes. In general, students’ mental models about how glaciers function and how they create landforms are relatively simplistic and incomplete. Students are unaware of the major erosional properties associated with glaciers and many of them do not specify that glaciers are bodies of ice that have a tendency to move down slope. The analysis of the data yielded four mental model categories. Fieldwork influenced the short-term effects on mental model development even though its positive impact decreases over time. Mental models including scientific views were only found in the post-instruction group. On the other hand, the pre-instruction group was strongly influenced by a catastrophic event that occurred in the region in 1959 (the Ribadelago flooding), which interferes with students’ mental reasoning on the formation of landscape features. This way of thinking is reinforced and/or mixed with a religious myth (Villaverde de Lucerna legend), which also invokes a catastrophic origin of the lake. In this case, this includes mystic flooding.https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3263/9/5/238fieldworkmental modelglaciersmental representationalternative conceptionsmisconceptionsfield tripsurficial processesgeosciences educationgeography education |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Diego Corrochano Alejandro Gómez-Gonçalves |
spellingShingle |
Diego Corrochano Alejandro Gómez-Gonçalves How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain) Geosciences fieldwork mental model glaciers mental representation alternative conceptions misconceptions field trip surficial processes geosciences education geography education |
author_facet |
Diego Corrochano Alejandro Gómez-Gonçalves |
author_sort |
Diego Corrochano |
title |
How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain) |
title_short |
How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain) |
title_full |
How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain) |
title_fullStr |
How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain) |
title_full_unstemmed |
How Glaciers Function and How They Create Landforms: Testing the Effectiveness of Fieldwork on Students’ Mental Models—A Case Study from the Sanabria Lake (NW Spain) |
title_sort |
how glaciers function and how they create landforms: testing the effectiveness of fieldwork on students’ mental models—a case study from the sanabria lake (nw spain) |
publisher |
MDPI AG |
series |
Geosciences |
issn |
2076-3263 |
publishDate |
2019-05-01 |
description |
This paper analyzes the impact of fieldwork on the development of students’ mental models concerning glaciers and their effects on the landscape. Data were collected by means of an open-ended questionnaire that was administered to 279 pre-service teachers before and after an educational field trip, which analyzed its impact on short-term and long-term outcomes. In general, students’ mental models about how glaciers function and how they create landforms are relatively simplistic and incomplete. Students are unaware of the major erosional properties associated with glaciers and many of them do not specify that glaciers are bodies of ice that have a tendency to move down slope. The analysis of the data yielded four mental model categories. Fieldwork influenced the short-term effects on mental model development even though its positive impact decreases over time. Mental models including scientific views were only found in the post-instruction group. On the other hand, the pre-instruction group was strongly influenced by a catastrophic event that occurred in the region in 1959 (the Ribadelago flooding), which interferes with students’ mental reasoning on the formation of landscape features. This way of thinking is reinforced and/or mixed with a religious myth (Villaverde de Lucerna legend), which also invokes a catastrophic origin of the lake. In this case, this includes mystic flooding. |
topic |
fieldwork mental model glaciers mental representation alternative conceptions misconceptions field trip surficial processes geosciences education geography education |
url |
https://www.mdpi.com/2076-3263/9/5/238 |
work_keys_str_mv |
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