APS April Meeting 2010
Volume 55, Number 1
Saturday–Tuesday, February 13–16, 2010;
Washington, DC
Session B6: Taxonomies as Tools for Enhancing Physics Learning
10:45 AM–12:33 PM,
Saturday, February 13, 2010
Room: Washington 5
Sponsoring
Units:
FEd DNP AAPT
Chair: Gerald Feldman, The George Washington University
Abstract ID: BAPS.2010.APR.B6.1
Abstract: B6.00001 : A New Approach to Analyzing the Cognitive Load in Physics Problems
10:45 AM–11:21 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Raluca Teodorescu
(Department of Physics, The George Washington University)
I will present a Taxonomy of Introductory Physics Problems
(TIPP), which relates physics problems to the cognitive processes
and the knowledge required to solve them. TIPP was created for
designing and clarifying educational objectives, for developing
assessments to evaluate components of the problem-solving
process, and for guiding curriculum design in
introductory physics courses. To construct TIPP, I considered
processes that have been identified either by cognitive science
and expert-novice research or by direct observation of students'
behavior while solving physics problems. Based on Marzano and
Kendall's taxonomy [1], I developed a procedure to classify
physics problems according to the cognitive processes that they
involve and the knowledge to which they refer. The procedure is
applicable to any physics problem and its validity and
reliability have been confirmed. This algorithm was then used to
build TIPP, which is a database that contains text-based and
research-based physics problems and explains their relationship
to cognitive processes and knowledge. TIPP has been used in the
years 2006--2009 to reform the first semester of the introductory
algebra-based physics course at The George Washington University.
The reform targeted students' cognitive development and attitudes
improvement. The methodology employed in the course involves
exposing students to certain types of problems in a variety of
contexts with increasing complexity. To
assess the effectiveness of our approach, rubrics were created to
evaluate students' problem-solving abilities and the Colorado
Learning Attitudes about Science Survey (CLASS) was administered
pre- and post-instruction to determine students' shift in
dispositions towards learning physics. Our results show
definitive gains in the areas targeted by our curricular
reform.\\[4pt]
[1] R.J. Marzano and J.S. Kendall, \textit{The New Taxonomy of
Educational Objectives}, 2$^{nd}$ Ed., (Corwin Press, Thousand
Oaks, 2007).
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2010.APR.B6.1