论文标题
在互动介绍性物理课程后保留概念学习
Retention of conceptual learning after an interactive introductory physics course
论文作者
论文摘要
本科物理课程的循环格式取决于学生回忆和利用先前课程中涵盖的材料的能力,以便在以后的课程中可靠地基于这些知识。但是,有证据表明,人们通常不会保留所有人,甚至大多数人以前学到的东西。保留多少信息似乎取决于个人的学习方法以及教学风格。特别是有证据表明,课堂上的积极参与技术可以改善学生随着时间的推移保留材料。在这里,我们报告了对学生对概念理解的保留的纵向研究的结果,这些理解是通过力量和运动概念评估(FMCE)衡量的,该概念评估(FMCE)是基于微积分的物理学课程,该课程具有大量的主动参与讲座和朗诵。通过在第一学期物理课程的末尾以及随后的第二学期物理课程开始时管理FMCE,我们研究了学生在1-15个月内的知识保留。我们发现,这两个课程之间的学生FMCE分数的转变是积极的,但对应于较小的效果大小,表明学生有效地保留了所有概念学习(按FMCE衡量)。即使两个课程之间的差距的长度增加,这一发现在很大程度上仍然存在。我们还发现,在分解学生在个人问题上的表现时,大多数学生都在个人问题上保持得分。在所有问题上平均,大约有五分之一的学生将答案从正确或错误或错误切换到任何给定项目。
The cyclic format of the undergraduate physics curriculum depends on students' ability to recall and utilize material covered in prior courses in order to reliably build on that knowledge in later courses. However, there is evidence to suggest that people often do not retain all, or even most, of what they learned previously. How much information is retained appears to be dependent both on the individuals' approach to learning as well as the style of instruction. In particular, there is evidence to suggest that active engagement techniques in the classroom can improve students' retention of the material over time. Here, we report the findings of a longitudinal investigation of students' retention of conceptual understanding as measured by the Force and Motion Conceptual Evaluation (FMCE) following a first-semester, calculus-based introductory physics course, which features significant active engagement in both lecture and recitation. By administering the FMCE at the end of a first-semester physics course and again at the beginning of the subsequent second-semester physics course, we examine students' knowledge retention over time periods ranging from 1-15 months. We find that the shift in students' FMCE scores between these two courses is positive but corresponds to a small effect size, indicating that students retained effectively all of their conceptual learning (as measured by the FMCE). This finding largely persists even as the length of the gap between the two courses increases. We also find that, when breaking out students' performance on individual questions, the majority of students maintain their score on individual questions. Averaged over all questions, roughly a fifth of the students switched their answers from right to wrong or wrong to right on any given item.