Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work

Previous studies have reported that students employed different problem solving approaches when presented with the same task structured with different representations. In this study, we explored and compared students’ strategies as they attempted tasks from two topical areas, kinematics and work. Ou...

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Main Authors: Bashirah Ibrahim, N. Sanjay Rebello
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2012-06-01
Series:Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research
Online Access:http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.8.010126
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spelling doaj-f2a3c08af8614e5b893f18623b5264622020-11-25T00:17:36ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research1554-91782012-06-0181Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and workBashirah IbrahimN. Sanjay RebelloPrevious studies have reported that students employed different problem solving approaches when presented with the same task structured with different representations. In this study, we explored and compared students’ strategies as they attempted tasks from two topical areas, kinematics and work. Our participants were 19 engineering students taking a calculus-based physics course. The tasks were presented in linguistic, graphical, and symbolic forms and requested either a qualitative solution or a value. The analysis was both qualitative and quantitative in nature focusing principally on the characteristics of the strategies employed as well as the underlying reasoning for their applications. A comparison was also made for the same student’s approach with the same kind of representation across the two topics. Additionally, the participants’ overall strategies across the different tasks, in each topic, were considered. On the whole, we found that the students prefer manipulating equations irrespective of the representational format of the task. They rarely recognized the applicability of a “qualitative” approach to solve the problem although they were aware of the concepts involved. Even when the students included visual representations in their solutions, they seldom used these representations in conjunction with the mathematical part of the problem. Additionally, the students were not consistent in their approach for interpreting and solving problems with the same kind of representation across the two topical areas. The representational format, level of prior knowledge, and familiarity with a topic appeared to influence their strategies, their written responses, and their ability to recognize qualitative ways to attempt a problem. The nature of the solution does not seem to impact the strategies employed to handle the problem.http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.8.010126
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Bashirah Ibrahim
N. Sanjay Rebello
spellingShingle Bashirah Ibrahim
N. Sanjay Rebello
Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research
author_facet Bashirah Ibrahim
N. Sanjay Rebello
author_sort Bashirah Ibrahim
title Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
title_short Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
title_full Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
title_fullStr Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
title_full_unstemmed Representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
title_sort representational task formats and problem solving strategies in kinematics and work
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research
issn 1554-9178
publishDate 2012-06-01
description Previous studies have reported that students employed different problem solving approaches when presented with the same task structured with different representations. In this study, we explored and compared students’ strategies as they attempted tasks from two topical areas, kinematics and work. Our participants were 19 engineering students taking a calculus-based physics course. The tasks were presented in linguistic, graphical, and symbolic forms and requested either a qualitative solution or a value. The analysis was both qualitative and quantitative in nature focusing principally on the characteristics of the strategies employed as well as the underlying reasoning for their applications. A comparison was also made for the same student’s approach with the same kind of representation across the two topics. Additionally, the participants’ overall strategies across the different tasks, in each topic, were considered. On the whole, we found that the students prefer manipulating equations irrespective of the representational format of the task. They rarely recognized the applicability of a “qualitative” approach to solve the problem although they were aware of the concepts involved. Even when the students included visual representations in their solutions, they seldom used these representations in conjunction with the mathematical part of the problem. Additionally, the students were not consistent in their approach for interpreting and solving problems with the same kind of representation across the two topical areas. The representational format, level of prior knowledge, and familiarity with a topic appeared to influence their strategies, their written responses, and their ability to recognize qualitative ways to attempt a problem. The nature of the solution does not seem to impact the strategies employed to handle the problem.
url http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.8.010126
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