Abstract

Instruction is unlikely to be effective if instructors do not know the common alternate conceptions of introductory physics students and explicitly take into account common student difficulties in their instructional design. Here, we discuss research involving the Conceptual Survey of Electricity and Magnetism (CSEM) to evaluate one aspect of the pedagogical content knowledge of teaching assistants (TAs): knowledge of introductory students' alternate conceptions in electricity and magnetism as revealed by the CSEM. For each item on the CSEM, the TAs were asked to identify the most common incorrect answer choice selected by introductory physics students if they did not know the correct answer after traditional instruction. Then, we used introductory student CSEM post-test data to assess the extent to which TAs were able to identify the most common alternate conception of introductory students in each question on the CSEM. We find that the TAs were thoughtful when attempting to identify common student difficulties and they enjoyed learning about student difficulties this way. However, they struggled to identify many common difficulties of introductory students that persist after traditional instruction. We discuss specific alternate conceptions that persist after traditional instruction, the extent to which TAs were able to identify them, and results from think-aloud interviews with TAs which provided valuable information regarding why the TAs sometimes selected certain alternate conceptions as the most common but were instead very rare among introductory students. We also discuss how tasks such as the one used in this study can be used in professional development programs to engender productive discussions about the importance of being knowledgeable about student alternate conceptions in order to help students learn.

Highlights

  • IntroductionGraduate students in physics across the United States have been playing an important role in educating the generation of students for a long time

  • We extend our previous work and use the Conceptual Survey of Electricity and Magnetism (CSEM) to investigate the extent to which teaching assistants (TAs) enrolled in a semester-long professional development course are knowledgeable about the most common incorrect answer choice (MCI) of students related to electricity and magnetism after traditional instruction as revealed by the CSEM

  • The researchers performed the analysis of the CSEM-related pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) performance with the student data from algebra-based classes in Ref. [23] as discussed below

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Summary

Introduction

Graduate students in physics across the United States have been playing an important role in educating the generation of students for a long time. Physics education researchers have been involved in research on identifying common beliefs and practices among physics TAs that have implications for effective teaching [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9].

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