Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities

The term “weight” has multiple related meanings in both scientific and everyday usage. Even among experts and in textbooks, weight is ambiguously defined as either the gravitational force on an object or operationally as the magnitude of the force an object exerts on a measuring scale. This poses bo...

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Main Authors: Rex Taibu, David Rudge, David Schuster
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2015-06-01
Series:Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.11.010117
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spelling doaj-f41aea226bcb44db873a8ff03ef017a62020-11-25T00:51:25ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research1554-91782015-06-0111101011710.1103/PhysRevSTPER.11.010117Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguitiesRex TaibuDavid RudgeDavid SchusterThe term “weight” has multiple related meanings in both scientific and everyday usage. Even among experts and in textbooks, weight is ambiguously defined as either the gravitational force on an object or operationally as the magnitude of the force an object exerts on a measuring scale. This poses both conceptual and language difficulties for learners, especially for accelerating objects where the scale reading is different from the gravitational force. But while the underlying physical constructs behind the two referents for the term weight (and their relation to each other) are well understood scientifically, it is unclear how the concept of weight should be introduced to students and how the language ambiguities should be dealt with. We investigated treatments of weight in a sample of twenty introductory college physics textbooks, analyzing and coding their content based on the definition adopted, how the distinct constructs were dealt with in various situations, terminologies used, and whether and how language issues were handled. Results indicate that language-related issues, such as different, inconsistent, or ambiguous uses of the terms weight, “apparent weight,” and “weightlessness,” were prevalent both across and within textbooks. The physics of the related constructs was not always clearly presented, particularly for accelerating bodies such as astronauts in spaceships, and the language issue was rarely addressed. Our analysis of both literature and textbooks leads us to an instructional position which focuses on the physics constructs before introducing the term weight, and which explicitly discusses the associated language issues.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.11.010117
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rex Taibu
David Rudge
David Schuster
spellingShingle Rex Taibu
David Rudge
David Schuster
Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities
Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research
author_facet Rex Taibu
David Rudge
David Schuster
author_sort Rex Taibu
title Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities
title_short Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities
title_full Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities
title_fullStr Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities
title_full_unstemmed Textbook presentations of weight: Conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities
title_sort textbook presentations of weight: conceptual difficulties and language ambiguities
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research
issn 1554-9178
publishDate 2015-06-01
description The term “weight” has multiple related meanings in both scientific and everyday usage. Even among experts and in textbooks, weight is ambiguously defined as either the gravitational force on an object or operationally as the magnitude of the force an object exerts on a measuring scale. This poses both conceptual and language difficulties for learners, especially for accelerating objects where the scale reading is different from the gravitational force. But while the underlying physical constructs behind the two referents for the term weight (and their relation to each other) are well understood scientifically, it is unclear how the concept of weight should be introduced to students and how the language ambiguities should be dealt with. We investigated treatments of weight in a sample of twenty introductory college physics textbooks, analyzing and coding their content based on the definition adopted, how the distinct constructs were dealt with in various situations, terminologies used, and whether and how language issues were handled. Results indicate that language-related issues, such as different, inconsistent, or ambiguous uses of the terms weight, “apparent weight,” and “weightlessness,” were prevalent both across and within textbooks. The physics of the related constructs was not always clearly presented, particularly for accelerating bodies such as astronauts in spaceships, and the language issue was rarely addressed. Our analysis of both literature and textbooks leads us to an instructional position which focuses on the physics constructs before introducing the term weight, and which explicitly discusses the associated language issues.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.11.010117
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