Newton, we have a problem...

Many Year 12 physics students in Western Australia have inadequate and underdeveloped conceptions about force, preventing them from reasoning effectively about situations involving forces. They are unable to consistently and accurately represent forces in diagrams because they cannot identify the fo...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yeo, Shelley, Zadnik, Marjan
Format: Journal Article
Published: Australian Science Teachers' Association 2000
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25009
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author Yeo, Shelley
Zadnik, Marjan
author_facet Yeo, Shelley
Zadnik, Marjan
author_sort Yeo, Shelley
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description Many Year 12 physics students in Western Australia have inadequate and underdeveloped conceptions about force, preventing them from reasoning effectively about situations involving forces. They are unable to consistently and accurately represent forces in diagrams because they cannot identify the forces acting in any given situation. While part of their difficulty may be attributed to naive conceptions learned through experience, teachers and scientists may be inadvertently contributing to the maintenance of students' alternative conceptions through their representations of physics. Newton, himself, may be at the heart of the problem. Constructivism, which describes how people know and learn, encompasses the assertion that children's learning is dependent on what they already know. Children enter high school with many Aristotelian conceptions of force and motion, and this knowledge determines how they subsequently internalise and remember further information. If we are to help students make more productive sense of physics we must examine how our teaching and portrayal of physics reinforces these naive force-motion conceptions and then design more effective teaching/learning strategies.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-250092017-02-28T01:42:12Z Newton, we have a problem... Yeo, Shelley Zadnik, Marjan Many Year 12 physics students in Western Australia have inadequate and underdeveloped conceptions about force, preventing them from reasoning effectively about situations involving forces. They are unable to consistently and accurately represent forces in diagrams because they cannot identify the forces acting in any given situation. While part of their difficulty may be attributed to naive conceptions learned through experience, teachers and scientists may be inadvertently contributing to the maintenance of students' alternative conceptions through their representations of physics. Newton, himself, may be at the heart of the problem. Constructivism, which describes how people know and learn, encompasses the assertion that children's learning is dependent on what they already know. Children enter high school with many Aristotelian conceptions of force and motion, and this knowledge determines how they subsequently internalise and remember further information. If we are to help students make more productive sense of physics we must examine how our teaching and portrayal of physics reinforces these naive force-motion conceptions and then design more effective teaching/learning strategies. 2000 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25009 Australian Science Teachers' Association restricted
spellingShingle Yeo, Shelley
Zadnik, Marjan
Newton, we have a problem...
title Newton, we have a problem...
title_full Newton, we have a problem...
title_fullStr Newton, we have a problem...
title_full_unstemmed Newton, we have a problem...
title_short Newton, we have a problem...
title_sort newton, we have a problem...
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/25009