Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification

Bibliography: leaves 207-218. === This study describes the development, validation, classification, administration and assessment of a compact programme of ten core practical task items chosen from a pool of 33 practical tasks developed for the purpose of this study in basic school physical science....

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Inal, Aydin
Other Authors: Rochford, Kevin
Format: Dissertation
Language:English
Published: University of Cape Town 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11566
id ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-11566
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uct-oai-localhost-11427-115662020-10-06T05:11:18Z Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification Inal, Aydin Rochford, Kevin Education Bibliography: leaves 207-218. This study describes the development, validation, classification, administration and assessment of a compact programme of ten core practical task items chosen from a pool of 33 practical tasks developed for the purpose of this study in basic school physical science. The practical items encouraged and measured various science process skills laid out in the South African Revised National Curriculum Statement Draft. The derivation and classification of the specially designed diagnostic practical task items by experienced lecturers, teachers and academics constitutes an original and crucial part of the study. The objective is to assess the consensus of juries of four to eleven expert science educators on classification of the ten core practical activities, matching the categories. The investigation establishes whether there is a perceived relevant match or a perceived "irrelevant" mismatch between the science process skills tested by the current experimental programme of practical items and the descriptive theories of practical science and its classification schemes and criteria proposed by (a) Franus (1992), (b) Gardner (1983), (c) White (1988), (d) Solomon (1998), (e) Lock (1990), (t) Kapenda, Kandjeo-Marenga, Gaoseb, Kasanda and Lubben's (2001) the Cambridge-based International General Certificate of Education after Millar, Ie Marechal and Tiberghiea (1999), (g) Race (1997) and (h) OBE (Revised National Curriculum Statement Draft, 2001). Lock's assessment framework for practical tasks was found to be the most relevant scheme among the others. The study also identified eight process skills that are highly relevant to practical tasks of the compact programme. These skills included: (a) comprehension skills; (b) recognising given item of apparatus; (c) following instructions; (d) carrying out tasks and handling science apparatus; (e) observation skills; (t) interpretation of the observations; (g) making predictions; and (h) reporting and communicating scientific information. 2015-01-06T12:10:00Z 2015-01-06T12:10:00Z 2002 Master Thesis Masters MEd http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11566 eng application/pdf University of Cape Town Faculty of Humanities School of Education
collection NDLTD
language English
format Dissertation
sources NDLTD
topic Education
spellingShingle Education
Inal, Aydin
Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification
description Bibliography: leaves 207-218. === This study describes the development, validation, classification, administration and assessment of a compact programme of ten core practical task items chosen from a pool of 33 practical tasks developed for the purpose of this study in basic school physical science. The practical items encouraged and measured various science process skills laid out in the South African Revised National Curriculum Statement Draft. The derivation and classification of the specially designed diagnostic practical task items by experienced lecturers, teachers and academics constitutes an original and crucial part of the study. The objective is to assess the consensus of juries of four to eleven expert science educators on classification of the ten core practical activities, matching the categories. The investigation establishes whether there is a perceived relevant match or a perceived "irrelevant" mismatch between the science process skills tested by the current experimental programme of practical items and the descriptive theories of practical science and its classification schemes and criteria proposed by (a) Franus (1992), (b) Gardner (1983), (c) White (1988), (d) Solomon (1998), (e) Lock (1990), (t) Kapenda, Kandjeo-Marenga, Gaoseb, Kasanda and Lubben's (2001) the Cambridge-based International General Certificate of Education after Millar, Ie Marechal and Tiberghiea (1999), (g) Race (1997) and (h) OBE (Revised National Curriculum Statement Draft, 2001). Lock's assessment framework for practical tasks was found to be the most relevant scheme among the others. The study also identified eight process skills that are highly relevant to practical tasks of the compact programme. These skills included: (a) comprehension skills; (b) recognising given item of apparatus; (c) following instructions; (d) carrying out tasks and handling science apparatus; (e) observation skills; (t) interpretation of the observations; (g) making predictions; and (h) reporting and communicating scientific information.
author2 Rochford, Kevin
author_facet Rochford, Kevin
Inal, Aydin
author Inal, Aydin
author_sort Inal, Aydin
title Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification
title_short Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification
title_full Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification
title_fullStr Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification
title_full_unstemmed Practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification
title_sort practical science process skills in physics, with special reference to test item assessment and classification
publisher University of Cape Town
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/11566
work_keys_str_mv AT inalaydin practicalscienceprocessskillsinphysicswithspecialreferencetotestitemassessmentandclassification
_version_ 1719348934577487872