Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry

Mental models for scientific learning are often defined as, "cognitive tools situated between experiments and theories" (Duschl & Grandy, 2012). In learning, these cognitive tools are used to not only take in new information, but to help problem solve in new contexts. Nancy Nersessian...

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Main Author: Allen, Emily Christine
Language:en_US
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/2144/13997
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spelling ndltd-bu.edu-oai-open.bu.edu-2144-139972019-12-11T15:02:37Z Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry Allen, Emily Christine Education Modeling Visualization Chemistry education Conceptual change Student learning Visual representations Mental models for scientific learning are often defined as, "cognitive tools situated between experiments and theories" (Duschl & Grandy, 2012). In learning, these cognitive tools are used to not only take in new information, but to help problem solve in new contexts. Nancy Nersessian (2008) describes a mental model as being [loosely] characterized as a representation of a system with interactive parts with representations of those interactions. Models can be qualitative, quantitative, and/or simulative (mental, physical, computational)" (p. 63). If conceptual parts used by the students in science education are inaccurate, then the resulting model will not be useful. Students in college general chemistry courses are presented with multiple abstract topics and often struggle to fit these parts into complete models. This is especially true for topics that are founded on quantum concepts, such as atomic structure and molecular bonding taught in college general chemistry. The objectives of this study were focused on how students use visual tools introduced during instruction to reason with atomic and molecular structure, what misconceptions may be associated with these visual tools, and how visual modeling skills may be taught to support students' use of visual tools for reasoning. The research questions for this study follow from Gilbert's (2008) theory that experts use multiple representations when reasoning and modeling a system, and Kozma and Russell's (2005) theory of representational competence levels. This study finds that as students developed greater command of their understanding of abstract quantum concepts, they spontaneously provided additional representations to describe their more sophisticated models of atomic and molecular structure during interviews. This suggests that when visual modeling with multiple representations is taught, along with the limitations of the representations, it can assist students in the development of models for reasoning about abstract topics such as atomic and molecular structure. There is further gain if students’ difficulties with these representations are targeted through the use additional instruction such as a workbook that requires the students to exercise their visual modeling skills. 2016-01-13T15:04:56Z 2016-01-13T15:04:56Z 2015 2015-11-04T02:06:51Z Thesis/Dissertation https://hdl.handle.net/2144/13997 en_US Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Education
Modeling
Visualization
Chemistry education
Conceptual change
Student learning
Visual representations
spellingShingle Education
Modeling
Visualization
Chemistry education
Conceptual change
Student learning
Visual representations
Allen, Emily Christine
Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry
description Mental models for scientific learning are often defined as, "cognitive tools situated between experiments and theories" (Duschl & Grandy, 2012). In learning, these cognitive tools are used to not only take in new information, but to help problem solve in new contexts. Nancy Nersessian (2008) describes a mental model as being [loosely] characterized as a representation of a system with interactive parts with representations of those interactions. Models can be qualitative, quantitative, and/or simulative (mental, physical, computational)" (p. 63). If conceptual parts used by the students in science education are inaccurate, then the resulting model will not be useful. Students in college general chemistry courses are presented with multiple abstract topics and often struggle to fit these parts into complete models. This is especially true for topics that are founded on quantum concepts, such as atomic structure and molecular bonding taught in college general chemistry. The objectives of this study were focused on how students use visual tools introduced during instruction to reason with atomic and molecular structure, what misconceptions may be associated with these visual tools, and how visual modeling skills may be taught to support students' use of visual tools for reasoning. The research questions for this study follow from Gilbert's (2008) theory that experts use multiple representations when reasoning and modeling a system, and Kozma and Russell's (2005) theory of representational competence levels. This study finds that as students developed greater command of their understanding of abstract quantum concepts, they spontaneously provided additional representations to describe their more sophisticated models of atomic and molecular structure during interviews. This suggests that when visual modeling with multiple representations is taught, along with the limitations of the representations, it can assist students in the development of models for reasoning about abstract topics such as atomic and molecular structure. There is further gain if students’ difficulties with these representations are targeted through the use additional instruction such as a workbook that requires the students to exercise their visual modeling skills.
author Allen, Emily Christine
author_facet Allen, Emily Christine
author_sort Allen, Emily Christine
title Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry
title_short Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry
title_full Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry
title_fullStr Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry
title_full_unstemmed Picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry
title_sort picture this: the value of multiple visual representations for student learning of quantum concepts in general chemistry
publishDate 2016
url https://hdl.handle.net/2144/13997
work_keys_str_mv AT allenemilychristine picturethisthevalueofmultiplevisualrepresentationsforstudentlearningofquantumconceptsingeneralchemistry
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