2005 APS April Meeting
Saturday–Tuesday, April 16–19, 2005;
Tampa, FL
Session H3: Education and Exploration of the Universe
8:30 AM–10:18 AM,
Sunday, April 17, 2005
Marriott Tampa Waterside
Room: Grand Salon A/B
Sponsoring
Unit:
FEd
Chair: Ramon Lopez, FI Tech
Abstract ID: BAPS.2005.APR.H3.2
Abstract: H3.00002 : Improving Education and Public Outreach Through Astronomy Education Research
9:06 AM–9:42 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Timothy F. Slater
(University of Arizona)
Following in the footsteps of physics education research, the
relatively new
field of astronomy education research is already making dramatic
improvements to the teaching and learning of astronomy. Whereas
physics
education research has focused predominantly on the introductory
physics
course, astronomy education is working on developing instruments
and models
to understand widely ranging domains that span K-12,
undergraduate majors
and non-majors, and even into the realms of public outreach. As
one example,
the repeated call for a more student-centered approach to
teaching due to
the ineffectiveness of lecture has been gaining prominence in the
astronomy
teaching community. At the beginning of a large-enrollment
introductory
astronomy survey course, we administered 68-multiple choice items
as a
pretest to 81 students. At the end of each lecture we
administered the
specific items related to that particular day's lecture a second
time as a
posttest. The pretest was 30{\%} correct and the test, when given
after
lecture alone showed 52{\%} correct. These results illustrate that
instructor-centered strategies are largely ineffective at promoting
meaningful conceptual gains. Alternatively, when using curriculum
materials
created from a basis of astronomy education research, we find
that the
posttest average score grows beyond 70{\%}. Each 15-minute
\textit{Lecture-Tutorial} poses a carefully crafted sequence of
conceptually challenging,
Socratic-dialogue driven questions, along with graphs and data
tables, all
designed to encourage students to reason critically about
difficult concepts
in astronomy. A significant effort was focused on carefully
evaluating
changes in students' conceptual understanding and attitudes
toward learning
astronomy. The quantitative and qualitative results strongly
suggest that
the \textit{Lecture-Tutorials} help students make significant
conceptual gains.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2005.APR.H3.2