Title of article
Heat Energy and Temperature Concepts of Adolescents, Adults, and Experts: Implications for Curricular Improvements
Author/Authors
Lewis، Eileen L. نويسنده , , Linn، Marcia C. نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
-154
From page
155
To page
0
Abstract
We conducted two studies of beliefs about laboratory and everyday thermal phenomena. The first study identified concepts of heat energy and temperature held by adolescents, adults, and scientists. We found a classic separation of "school" and "everyday" knowledge in each population. We conducted clinical interviews with 37 middle school students, 9 adults, and 8 chemists and physicists to obtain their predictions and explanations of real-world phenomena. Many students believed that metals "conduct," "absorb," "trap," or "hold" cold better than other materials and that aluminum foil would be better than wool or cotton as a wrapping material to keep cold objects cold. Respondents in each group held many intuitive ideas that were well established. Although scientists made more accurate predictions than students and gave theoretical definitions of terms, they too had difficulty explaining everyday phenomena. The second study investigated the impact of a middle school science curriculum designed to help students understand everyday thermal events. We found marked improvements in posttest scores and clinical interview responses as a result of instruction that built on studentsʹ intuitions.
Keywords
concept mapping , seed concepts , micromapping
Journal title
Journal of Research in Science Teaching
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Research in Science Teaching
Record number
34574
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