Abstract

Drawing appropriate diagrams is a useful problem solving heuristic that can transform a problem into a representation that is easier to exploit for solving it. One major focus while helping introductory physics students learn effective problem solving is to help them understand that drawing diagrams can facilitate problem solution. We conducted an investigation in which two different interventions were implemented during recitation quizzes in a large enrollment algebra-based introductory physics course. Students were either (i) asked to solve problems in which the diagrams were drawn for them or (ii) explicitly told to draw a diagram. A comparison group was not given any instruction regarding diagrams. We developed rubrics to score the problem solving performance of students in different intervention groups and investigated ten problems. We found that students who were provided diagrams never performed better and actually performed worse than the other students on three problems, one involving standing sound waves in a tube (discussed elsewhere) and two problems in electricity which we focus on here. These two problems were the only problems in electricity that involved considerations of initial and final conditions, which may partly account for why students provided with diagrams performed significantly worse than students who were not provided with diagrams. In order to explore potential reasons for this finding, we conducted interviews with students and found that some students provided with diagrams may have spent less time on the conceptual analysis and planning stage of the problem solving process. In particular, those provided with the diagram were more likely to jump into the implementation stage of problem solving early without fully analyzing and understanding the problem, which can increase the likelihood of mistakes in solutions.

Highlights

  • Physics is a challenging subject to learn and it is especially difficult for introductory students to associate the abstract concepts they study in physics with more concrete representations that facilitate understanding without an explicit instructional strategy aimed to aid them in this regard

  • These latter interviews corroborated the findings from the in-class study and suggested one possible reason for the deteriorated performance of students provided with diagrams, namely, that on average, they spent less time on the conceptual analysis and planning stage and jumped into the implementation stage of problem solving without fully understanding the problem

  • Prior research suggests that students in classes which promote conceptual understanding through activelearning methods outperform those from traditionally taught classes even on quantitative tests [25,50,69,70,71,72,73,74,75]

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Physics is a challenging subject to learn and it is especially difficult for introductory students to associate the abstract concepts they study in physics with more concrete representations that facilitate understanding without an explicit instructional strategy aimed to aid them in this regard. Introductory physics students need explicit help to (i) understand that drawing a diagram is an important step in organizing and simplifying the given information into a representation which is more suitable to further analysis [56], and (ii) learn to draw appropriate and useful diagrams. Since the first several interviews which were conducted using a think-aloud protocol [63] seemed to impact student reasoning patterns, in a majority of interviews, students were observed by a researcher while they solved the problems posed without being asked to think aloud or disturbed in any other manner These latter interviews corroborated the findings from the in-class study and suggested one possible reason for the deteriorated performance of students provided with diagrams, namely, that on average, they spent less time on the conceptual analysis and planning stage and jumped into the implementation stage of problem solving without fully understanding the problem

Methodology for study 1
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Results for study 1
STUDY 2
DISCUSSION AND SUMMARY
Findings
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