Abstract

The Maryland Physics Expectations (MPEX) survey was designed to probe students' expectations about their understanding of the process of learning physics and the structure of physics knowledge---cognitive expectations. This survey was administered to first-year university students in Thailand in the first semester of an introductory calculus-based physics course during academic years 2007 and 2008, to assess their expectations at the beginning of the course. The precourse MPEX results were compared and correlated with two separate measures of student learning: (1) individual students' normalized gains from pre and post Force and Motion Conceptual Evaluation (FMCE) results, which measure students' conceptual understanding, and (2) student's scores on the final exam, which measure their more general problem-solving ability. The results showed a significant positive correlation between their overall MPEX score and five of the six MPEX cluster scores, with their normalized learning gains on the FMCE for both academic years. The results also showed significant positive correlations between student MPEX scores and their final exam scores for the overall MPEX score and all MPEX cluster scores except for the effort cluster. We interviewed two groups of five students each, one group with small favorable scores on the precourse MPEX effort cluster and one with high favorable scores on the precourse MPEX effort cluster, to see how the students' learning efforts compared with their MPEX results. We concluded from the interviews that what the students think or expect about the MPEX effort involved in learning physics does not match what they actually do.

Highlights

  • Over the past decade, physics education research has indicated that student attitudes, beliefs, and assumptions about physics and learning physics play a critical role in how they learn and understand the subject [1,2]

  • The results showed that the correlation coefficients range from 0.222 to 0.343 for the overall Maryland Physics Expectations (MPEX) score and five of six MPEX cluster scores

  • Our results showed that the students’ precourse expectations as measured by MPEX are correlated with multiple measures of student learning in calculus-based introductory physics courses in Thailand

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Summary

Introduction

Physics education research has indicated that student attitudes, beliefs, and assumptions about physics and learning physics play a critical role in how they learn and understand the subject [1,2]. Physics education researchers have probed student expectations (distinguishing between the expectations of experts and the expectations of novices) and found relationships and positive correlations between student expectations and learning [3,4]. These indicated that student expectations in physics play a critical role in their learning and understanding.

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