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Matthew M. Grondin; Michael I. Swart; Doy Kim; Kate Fu; Mitchell J. Nathan – Grantee Submission, 2024
Mechanical reasoning is crucial for many engineering fields, yet undergraduate engineering students struggle to understand discipline-specific formalisms from their courses that model mechanical concepts. The current investigation observed undergraduate engineering students' speech during mechanical reasoning and the benefits of attending to…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, Engineering Education, Thinking Skills, Logical Thinking
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Geyer, Marie-Annette; Pospiech, Gesche – Contributions from Science Education Research, 2019
Physical phenomena and relations can be described mathematically by functional dependencies. These are represented in the form of tables, graphs, algebraic expressions or verbal descriptions. Only the combination of different representations enables students to experience a physical phenomenon or concept in a holistic way. Therefore, students have…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Learning Processes, Prior Learning, Thinking Skills
Bhatnagar, Sameer; Lasry, Nathaniel; Desmarais, Michel; Dugdale, Michael; Whittaker, Chris; Charles, Elizabeth S. – International Educational Data Mining Society, 2015
This paper reports on an analyis of data from a novel "Peer Instruction" application, named DALITE. The Peer Instruction paradigm is well suited to take advantage of peer-input in web-based learning environments. DALITE implements an asynchronous instantiation of peer instruction: after submitting their answer to a multiple-choice…
Descriptors: Peer Teaching, Peer Evaluation, Web Based Instruction, Asynchronous Communication
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Arons, A. B. – American Journal of Physics, 1982
Specific illustrations are given of questions and problems designed to lead students in introductory physics courses into visualizing and reasoning qualitatively about physical phenomena. Examples include phenomena related to mechanics, electrostatic/magnetic interactions, resistive direct-current circuits, and Thompson's experiments marking the…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Atomic Theory, College Science, Electricity
Toth, G. F. – 1994
In teaching a well-organized college physics course that is understandable to students, teachers should first understand students' conditions and circumstances and be clear on the goals of the course. The goals of physics teaching are commonly defined as understanding the nature of scientific reasoning and the concepts and methods of physics,…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Course Descriptions, Course Objectives, Curriculum Development
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Linn, Marcia C. – 1979
This document discusses the relation between adolescents' expertise (their informational background, which can be accurate or inaccurate, about a particular task or subject) and their formal operational reasoning, and reports the results of three studies of the effects of children's expertise on reasoning. In Study I, adolescents from a rural…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Adolescents, Background, Developmental Stages
Boram, Robert D.; Renner, John W. – 1985
Students (N=49) enrolled in a physics course for elementary teachers were evaluated for their abilities to use: (1) combinatorial logic; (2) separation and control of variables; (3) proportional reasoning; and (4) reciprocal implications. Performance of four Piagetian tasks during interviews was treated as a measure of the degree to which students…
Descriptors: Abstract Reasoning, Cognitive Processes, Cognitive Structures, College Science