Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics

A diagnostic instrument consisting of 18 items was developed to evaluate students' understandings about mechanics. The instrument was administered to 240 eleventh grade students attending four typical public high schools in Thailand. Analysis of the students' responses identified the exist...

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Main Author: Tussatrin Kruatong
Other Authors: Mahidol University
Format: Article
Published: 2018
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Online Access:https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/12886
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spelling th-mahidol.128862018-05-03T15:45:50Z Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics Tussatrin Kruatong Mahidol University Social Sciences A diagnostic instrument consisting of 18 items was developed to evaluate students' understandings about mechanics. The instrument was administered to 240 eleventh grade students attending four typical public high schools in Thailand. Analysis of the students' responses identified the existence of patterns of reasoning that are common to conceptions in different areas of mechanics involving the direction of force acting on a moving object, objects moving under the sole influence of gravity, motion involving mechanical energy and momentum. Reliability proved sufficient (Cronbach's alpha equals .7). The study revealed students held a difficulty in understanding why and when to use force, motion, energy and momentum concepts, and especially the qualitatively interpreting basic principle related to conservation laws. Their skills of problem analysis and judgment on the efficiency of a given solution to a problem were poor. We also found a mismatch between students' confidence in answering the items and their correct responses through the correlation between the students' confidence of being correct on each item and the actual correct responses being significantly less than 0.278. Thus this instrument is a convenient diagnostic tool that any teacher could use to identify students' perceptions to the introduction of the topic and students' alternative conceptions during classroom instruction. © Common Ground, Tussatrin Kruatong. 2018-05-03T08:45:50Z 2018-05-03T08:45:50Z 2011-05-16 Article International Journal of Learning. Vol.17, No.10 (2011), 51-70 14479540 14479494 2-s2.0-79955805192 https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/12886 Mahidol University SCOPUS https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?partnerID=HzOxMe3b&scp=79955805192&origin=inward
institution Mahidol University
building Mahidol University Library
continent Asia
country Thailand
Thailand
content_provider Mahidol University Library
collection Mahidol University Institutional Repository
topic Social Sciences
spellingShingle Social Sciences
Tussatrin Kruatong
Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics
description A diagnostic instrument consisting of 18 items was developed to evaluate students' understandings about mechanics. The instrument was administered to 240 eleventh grade students attending four typical public high schools in Thailand. Analysis of the students' responses identified the existence of patterns of reasoning that are common to conceptions in different areas of mechanics involving the direction of force acting on a moving object, objects moving under the sole influence of gravity, motion involving mechanical energy and momentum. Reliability proved sufficient (Cronbach's alpha equals .7). The study revealed students held a difficulty in understanding why and when to use force, motion, energy and momentum concepts, and especially the qualitatively interpreting basic principle related to conservation laws. Their skills of problem analysis and judgment on the efficiency of a given solution to a problem were poor. We also found a mismatch between students' confidence in answering the items and their correct responses through the correlation between the students' confidence of being correct on each item and the actual correct responses being significantly less than 0.278. Thus this instrument is a convenient diagnostic tool that any teacher could use to identify students' perceptions to the introduction of the topic and students' alternative conceptions during classroom instruction. © Common Ground, Tussatrin Kruatong.
author2 Mahidol University
author_facet Mahidol University
Tussatrin Kruatong
format Article
author Tussatrin Kruatong
author_sort Tussatrin Kruatong
title Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics
title_short Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics
title_full Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics
title_fullStr Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics
title_full_unstemmed Development and Validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics
title_sort development and validation of a diagnostic instrument to evaluate secondary school students' conceptions and problem solving in mechanics
publishDate 2018
url https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/12886
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