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Identifying and Responding to Student Misconceptions

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Title: Identifying and Responding to Student Misconceptions


1
Identifying and Responding to Student
Misconceptions
  • Center for Teaching Excellence
  • 25 September 2008

2
Starting Points
  • Addressing perennial issue
  • Student learning and prior knowledge
  • Defining and identifying causes
  • Disciplinary concepts, misconceptions
  • Beginning to recognize misconceptions and
    teaching with (vs. against) them

3
Definitions
  • Persistent
  • Widely shared
  • More than incorrect
  • Concepts, conceptions, preconceptions, naive
    conceptions

4
  • Concept is the scientific notion underlying a
    class of things or events, as currently intended
    by the community of scientists and documented by
    leading textbooks. A concept acquires its meaning
    through its network of relationships with other
    concepts.

Conception refers to an individuals
interpretation of the meaning of a concept. Such
an interpretation would usually have some
idiosyncratic features, even if the individual is
a scientist.
from Thijs and van den Berg (1993)
5
Origins
  • Everyday understanding
  • Anthropocentrism
  • Intuition
  • Overgeneralization
  • Faulty analogy
  • and?

6
Ways to identify
  • Open-ended opportunities
  • What does this remind you of?
  • Paraphrasing
  • Concept maps
  • Drawing
  • Word association, analogies

7
Concept Inventories
  • The Force Concept Inventory
  • multiple-choice questions that pose relatively
    simple situations and ask students to make
    qualitative predictions about what will occur in
    these situations.
  • The distracters (incorrect answers) are derived
    from free responses (written) from students or
    from interviews they represent prevalent
    misconceptions about the laws of motion
  • Must know the misconceptions first

8
  • Difficult to create
  • reliable instruments

Klymkowsky, M.W. K. Garvin-Doxas. 2008.
Recognizing Student Misconceptions through Ed's
Tool and the Biology Concept Inventory. PLoS
Biology, 6e3 (1-14).
9
Concept Inventories
  • Astronomy Diagnostic Test
  • Hufnagel, B., Slater, T., Deming, G., J. Adams,
    Adrian, R.L., Brick, C., and M. Zeilik, M.
    Publications of the Astronomical Society of
    Australia, 17(2), 152 (2000).
  • Biology Concept Inventory
  • Garvin-Doxas, K. M.W. Klymkowsky. (2008). Life
    Science Education, in press.
  • Chemistry Concept Inventory
  • Jenkins, B.E., Birk, J.P., Bauer, R.C., Krause,
    S., and Pavelich, M.J. Symposium on Research in
    Chemistry Education," 227th National Meeting of
    the American Chemical Society
  • Mulford, D. R., Robinson, W. R. (2002). An
    inventory for alternate conceptions among
    first-semester general chemistry students.
    Journal of Chemical Education, 79(6), 739-74
  • Diffusion and Osmosis Diagnostic
  • Odom, A. L., Barrow, L. H. (1995). Journal of
    Research in Science teaching, 32, 45-61.4.
  • Force Concept Inventory
  • Hestenes, D., Wells, M., Swackhamer, G.
    (1992). Force Concept Inventory. The Physics
    Teacher, 30(3), 141-158.
  • Fluid Mechanics Concept Inventory
  • Martin, J.K., Mitchell, J., and Newell, T.,
    (2003) Proceedings, Frontiers in Education
    Conference, Boulder, CO.
  • Genetics Concept Inventory
  • Elrod, S (2007) http//bioliteracy.net/Readings/pa
    persSubmittedPDF/Elrod.pdf
  • Geoscience Concept Test
  • Libarkin, J., and Anderson, S.W., (2003) EOS,
    Transactions of the American Geophysical Union,
    v. 84, Abstract ED22E-06).
  • Host Pathogen Concept Inventory
  • Smith, A.C., Marbach-Ad,G., Briken,V.,
    El-Sayed, N., Frauwirth, K., Fredericksen,B.,Hutch
    eson,S., Gao,L.Y., Joseph,S., Lee, V.,McIver,
    K.S.,Mosser, D., Quimby, B.B.,Shields, P., Song,
    W.,Yuan, R.T., and Stein, D.C., (2007) Second
    Conceptual Assessment in Biology (CAB II)
    Conference.

10
Teaching to Misconceptions
  • Create conflict between problem and misconception
  • Models
  • Students explain processes
  • Telling is insufficient
  • Cannot simply do away with misconceptions
  • Integrate into new learning

11
An example
  • Course Introduction to the Novel
  • Misconception All long books are novels
  • Significance Genres demonstrate historically
    significant trends, tastes, and conditions.
    Misunderstanding the nature of a genre of long
    books indicates limited awareness of the novel
    as an artifact of those trends, tastes, and
    conditions.
  • Strategy Students identify and describe multiple
    genres of long books.
  • Purpose Recognition of these genres as related
    but distinct kinds of texts. Recognition of the
    specificity of the novel among other books.
    Beginning critical awareness on which to begin
    building understanding of the novel.

12
In the Disciplines
  • What are the big ideas?
  • What are your perceived misconceptions?
  • How might you identify them?
  • How to teach with them?
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