Title: CBLIS 2001
1Designing Applets that Foster Constructivist
Teaching and Learning
- CBLIS 2001
- July 2001
- Brno, Czech Republic
Brian Martin The Kings University
College Edmonton, Canada David Austen, Wytze
Brouwer The University of Alberta Edmonton, Canada
2What is MAP?
- A 4 year project involving collaboration of 6
post-secondary institutions in the province of
Alberta. MAP is intended to provide high quality
learning, WWW-deliverable objects for the
teaching of the first 3 terms of university level
Physics and scalable to meet the needs of most
high school curricula
3A closer look at MAP
- Highly modularized collection of learning
objects including - over 100 applets and applications
- extensive FLASH animation library
- Video and Lab interfacing via JAVA applications
- student tutorial modules
- extensive interactive questions with attention
paid to conceptual questions as well as numeric
response - Objects can be stand-alone or encapsulated within
the MAP NAVIGATOR
4Pedagogic Design and Philosophy
- MAP is built on a constructivist learning model
and all learning objects are designed to
encourage (demand?) student interactivity - Concept focussed
- Tutorial modules are usually designed to involve
a pair of students in conversation but can run
solo
5Designing Conceptual Applets
- they are designed to address a well-known
preconception (ie one identified in the research
literature) - they are entirely qualitative in both input and
output - they allow the student to draw directly on the
applet the expected outcome and then to compare
this with the correct result simulated by the
computer - the applets are designed to be attractive and
non-intimidating
6Conceptual Applets...
- 1-Dimensional Vertical Motion (force,
acceleration, and velocity) - 1-Dimensional Motion (force, acceleration, and
velocity) -
7Applets that augmentstudent experience...
- 2-Dimensional Motion (vectoral nature of
acceleration and velocity)
8Applets that Bridge the Transition from
Qualitative to Quantitative
9Applets that Bridge the Transition from
Qualitative to Quantitative
10Applets that Bridge the Transition from
Qualitative to Quantitative
11Applets that Bridge the Transition from
Qualitative to Quantitative
12Sample Map Tutorial
13Does MAP Work?
- Efficacy of MAP materials in improving conceptual
understanding and affecting attitude is the
principal burden of Mr Guoqiang Zhous doctoral
work in The Department of Secondary Education,
University of Alberta - Force Concept Inventory Test or FCI (Hestenes et
al 1992, Mazur, 1997) has been administered to 7
first year classes at the UofA (n 600) divided
as 4 control groups and 3 treatment groups. All
three treatment groups demonstrated a
statistically significant improvement in
performance on FCI post-tests compared to their
control group counterparts. - MAP materials do not appear to be effective in
changing student attitudes about physics as a
discipline.
14Technical Info...
- Applets run under JAVA 1.3.1- Sun Plugin (PC,
LINUX) or OSX (Mac) - Require JMF 2.1.1 (PC and LINUX only) for
VideoLab - Applet design makes extensive use of libraries
(approx. 1 Meg initial download, individual
applets typically 50K - 100 K) - Applets are signed using THAWTE certificates and
can access required peripherals (printers, files
etc) - Visit us at
- http//www.kingsu.ab.ca/brian/meltp/edit_content/
explainit/map_menu.html - http//vega.phys.ualberta.ca/alphy/meltp/
15Acknowledgments...
- Project MAP Executive Directors David Austen,
Wytze Brouwer, Hans Laue, Brian Martin - Project Associates Terry Singleton, Peter Wright
- Programmers (MAP_North)
- Nathan Laan, Dave Ooms, Rob McQuarrie, Tyler
Luchko, Mike Schuurman, Brian Martin - FLASH Travis Whyte, Leah Martin
- HTML Jennifer Rea
16Basic Constructivist Tenets
- Successful science teaching must develop
strategies and tools that acknowledge the
existence of powerful, preexistent frameworks of
ideas which students bring to bear on the ideas
that we teach (see, for example Driver and
Oldham, 1986, Berg and Brouwer 1991) - Constructivist teaching provides students with
sufficient experiences to interact with their
held beliefs and to enable students to construct
their own understandings of concepts and ideas.