Title: Eric Bailey
1Circuit City Classroom Using Urban Planning
Techniques and Movement of Traffic To Teach
Electric Theory
Eric Bailey Tamecia Jones Jennifer Steinman
2Agenda
- Prototype
- User Scenario for the Classroom
- Hands-on experience
- Understanding the Prototype
- The Landscape / Immersion in Problem
- Prior Experience
- Tech Challenge Observation
- Literature Review
3Prototype Overview
- The design product is an interactive exhibit
which helps students to understand circuit
current theory. - Here we will use the social, cultural, and
physical metaphor of city planning and cars
traveling over streets or within a larger context
of a city to explain the flow of current through
a circuit. - The form is both a physical artifact and a
mini-curriculum on electricity.
4Prototype Objectives
- Develop understanding of concepts of electricity
and allow transfer to real world
5Relation to elementary science education
General Skills Across K-12 Span
Early Elementary Upper Elementary/Middle Secondary
Recognition Recognition Recognition
Categorization Categorization Categorization
Explanation Explanation
Conceptualization
Mathematical Proof
Target skills of the prototype
6How does the project accomplish the objective?
- Uses cars and streets to help students understand
the concepts of electricity - Cars symbolize electricity flow
- Problem-solving can occur within the urban
planning context - Expandable to learners competency growth
7Prototype Affordances
- Visualization of concepts of electricity
- Typical electrical instruction uses batteries and
light bulbs but the flow of electricity can not
be seen because it is invisible - Inquiry based context
- drives conversation between students and teachers
- Sensory motor -
- Based on real-world experiences
8User Scenario Overview
- Ages Ms. Saranitis 5th Grade Class
- Context Single lesson in science class
- Parallel vs Series Circuits
- Part of electricity unit
- Scenario Ground in real-world problem
- Explain theory of electricity
- Use prototype to highlight concept
- Prototype is highly contextual
9Full Circuit City Curriculum
Concept Visible Example of Circulating Current
Electric Particle Car
Circuit Road loop with cars moving in one direction
Switch Road block, bridge road open or closed
Current of cars passing a point per unit of time
Battery Gas mechanism injecting energy
Resistance Road conditions hazards, curves, potholes
10Agenda
- Prototype
- Hands-on experience
- Understanding the Prototype
- User Scenario for the Classroom
- The Landscape / Immersion in Problem
- Prior Experience
- Tech Challenge Observation
- Literature Review
11Immersion in Problem
- Experience with Engineering Summer Camp
- Tutoring engineering students in electrical
engineering coursework - Tech Museum of Innovation in San Jose
- Furby Workshop
- Tech Challenge Engineering Workshops
- Observations / videos of workshops
12Key Findings From Tech Challenge Workshop Video
- Students have problems understanding series and
parallel beyond battery example - Engineering elements are abstract
- Switching between a representation and actual
elements or analogy is hard for all grade levels - Manipulation alone is not enough for
understanding - Students can do series circuit and parallel
circuit, but not combinational, do not understand
13Salient Literature
- Gibbons, P., McMahon, A., Weigers, J. 2003.
Hands-On Current Electricity A Professional
Development Course. Journal of Elementary
Science Education, Vol. 15, No. 2, pp. 1-11. - This article describes a teacher professional
development on how to teach electrical circuits
to their students. It begins with understanding
their own misconceptions, correcting them, and
then expanding their models to create lessons for
their students. It confirms our traveling car
analogy.
14Learning Theories
- Theory of Conceptual Change
- Structure Mapping Theory of Analogical Thinking
- Mental Models
15Conceptual Change Model
- Science education learning theory
- Instructor facilitates a discrepant events that
contradict the learners existing conceptual
framework and provides a teaching moment through
reactions of surprise or motivation to correct
the discrepant events. These four conditions
must occur - Dissatisfaction with existing conceptions
- A new (alternative) conception must be
intelligible - A new (alternative) conception must be appear
initially feasible - A new (alternative) concept should suggest the
possibility of fruitful research (testing)
program. - Posner et al. (1982)
16Conceptual Change Variations
- A process that enables students to synthesize
models in their minds, beginning with their
existing explanatory framework, (Vosniadou, 2002) - Repair of misconceptions, (Chi and Roscoe, 2002)
- The reorganization of diverse kinds of knowledge
into complex systems in students minds,
(diSessa, 2002) - Conceptual change results from changes in the way
that students use the tools in various contexts,
and the change actually occurs at the societal
level, (Ivarrson, Schoultz, and Saljo, 2002)
Suping, S. Conceptual Change Among Science
Students. 2003.
17Structure-Mapping Theory
- The structure-mapping analogy asserts that
identical operations and relationships hold among
nonidentical things. (Gentner and Gentner,
1983). - Base domain known domain
- Target domain domain of inquiry
- Analogy has components
- Object Relationships
- Object Attributes or surface features
- This is successful under these two conditions
- Preservations of relations relational
predicates, and not object attributes, carry over
into analogical mappings - Systematicity predicates are more likely to be
imported into the target into the target if they
belong to a system of coherent, mutually
constraining relationships, the others of which
map into the target.
18Instructional Analogies and Mental Models
- Di Vesta, F., Zook, K. (1991). Instructional
Analogies and Conceptual Misrepresentations.
Journal of Educational Psychology. Vol. 83, No.
2, pp. 246-252. - This article discusses the issues around
young/novice and adult/expert learners in
successfully mapping from the base domain to the
target domain, and how constraints will help the
learner see the goal of the analogy. It is
important to discriminate between relevant
relations and superficial attributes of the
object.
19Mental Model Resources
- Clement, J., Steinberg, M. (2002). Step-Wise
Evolution of Mental Models of Electric Circuits
A Learning-Aloud Case Study. The Journal of
the Learning Sciences. 11 (4). Pp 389-452. - Gentner, D., Gentner, D. (1983). Flowing
Waters or Teeming Crowds Mental Models of
Electricity. In D. Gentner and A. L. Stevens
(Eds.), Mental Models. Hillsdale, NJ Lawrence
Erlbaum. - Hadzigeorgiou, Y., Savage, M. 2001. A Study of
the Effect of Sensorimotor Experiences on the
Retention and Application of Two Fundamental
Physics Ideas. Journal of Elementary Science
Education. Vol. 13, No. 2, pp. 9-21.
20Developmental /Learning Theory
Design Structures
Solution
Objective
Sensori-motor Experience Visualizations Real-Wor
ld Application Embed in Community Context Proble
m-Based Learning
Develop understanding of concepts of electricity
and allow transfer to real world
Expandable, Interactive Prototype Auxiliary
Activities
Conceptual Change Structure-Mapping Mental
Models
21(No Transcript)
22Reflections on Design Process
- Immersion
- Observation
- Literature Review
- User scenario 1
- User scenario 2
- Prototype
23Prototype Sketches
- Interchangeable components
- First Pass at Analogy Sketch
24Prototype Sketches
- Conceptual Sketches for Parallel Unit of
Instruction
25Prototype Sketches