First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure

Student Number : 0316775W - MSc research report - Faculty of Science === This qualitative research project investigated the ideas of a small group of learners in the first year physics course at the University of the Witwatersrand in the area of atmospheric (air) pressure. These ideas constitute...

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Main Author: Small, John
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10539/1834
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-wits-oai-wiredspace.wits.ac.za-10539-18342019-05-11T03:41:20Z First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure Small, John first year physics learners atmospheric pressure Clinical interviews epistemological views ontological views Student Number : 0316775W - MSc research report - Faculty of Science This qualitative research project investigated the ideas of a small group of learners in the first year physics course at the University of the Witwatersrand in the area of atmospheric (air) pressure. These ideas constitute the prior knowledge with which these learners enter physics education at tertiary level. Clinical interviews were conducted with an initial sample of three (3) respondents, and the main study consisted of seven (7) first-year physics students. Data obtained during the course of the interviews was audio-taped and transcribed, and from an analysis of the transcripts a picture was obtained of the content of the knowledge held, and of the epistemological and ontological views that respondents entertained. What renders this work important is the argument that teachers are unable to assist the learning process without engaging actively with what their learners already know and believe. The first step in setting up learning experiences which can assist learners to become fluent in the construction of sound scientific explanations for phenomena and to become competent at weighing evidence is to determine the state of learners’ prior knowledge. The findings of this limited case study may be summed up as follows: There is very little indication, in the sample investigated in this study, that any meaningful learning has occurred in the areas of pressure, atmospheric pressure and the kinetic theory. These concepts have little or no explanatory power for learners in attempting to account for natural phenomena and technological applications in which atmospheric pressure is at work. 2006-11-17T08:19:32Z 2006-11-17T08:19:32Z 2006-11-17T08:19:32Z Thesis http://hdl.handle.net/10539/1834 en 346219 bytes application/pdf application/pdf
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic first year physics
learners
atmospheric pressure
Clinical interviews
epistemological views
ontological views
spellingShingle first year physics
learners
atmospheric pressure
Clinical interviews
epistemological views
ontological views
Small, John
First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure
description Student Number : 0316775W - MSc research report - Faculty of Science === This qualitative research project investigated the ideas of a small group of learners in the first year physics course at the University of the Witwatersrand in the area of atmospheric (air) pressure. These ideas constitute the prior knowledge with which these learners enter physics education at tertiary level. Clinical interviews were conducted with an initial sample of three (3) respondents, and the main study consisted of seven (7) first-year physics students. Data obtained during the course of the interviews was audio-taped and transcribed, and from an analysis of the transcripts a picture was obtained of the content of the knowledge held, and of the epistemological and ontological views that respondents entertained. What renders this work important is the argument that teachers are unable to assist the learning process without engaging actively with what their learners already know and believe. The first step in setting up learning experiences which can assist learners to become fluent in the construction of sound scientific explanations for phenomena and to become competent at weighing evidence is to determine the state of learners’ prior knowledge. The findings of this limited case study may be summed up as follows: There is very little indication, in the sample investigated in this study, that any meaningful learning has occurred in the areas of pressure, atmospheric pressure and the kinetic theory. These concepts have little or no explanatory power for learners in attempting to account for natural phenomena and technological applications in which atmospheric pressure is at work.
author Small, John
author_facet Small, John
author_sort Small, John
title First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure
title_short First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure
title_full First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure
title_fullStr First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure
title_full_unstemmed First year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure
title_sort first year university students conceptions of atmospheric pressure
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/10539/1834
work_keys_str_mv AT smalljohn firstyearuniversitystudentsconceptionsofatmosphericpressure
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