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| Reconciling Conflicting Evidence Researchers use models and handhelds to investigate how students learn science by Carolyn Staudt and Paul Horwitz What happens when a student's mental models do not agree with her observations, such as when a phenomenon observed in one situation fails to repeat itself on a larger scale? Does that mean all models are wrong, or are they just too simple to describe the complex situations that students face on a daily basis? To study this question, our Data and Models project is purposefully creating such conflicts for students in order to look at the interplay of theory and experiment and to develop strategies for dealing with it. Using state-of-the-art wireless data collection, simulation, and visualization technology (see article, page 7), we are guiding students at the Fowler Middle School in Maynard, Mass., through the study of heat transfer. By doing experiments that involve the variation (both temporal and spatial) of temperature in solids, liquids, and gases, students form models to describe what they see, and extend and revise those models in the face of conflicting evidence gained from experiments and observation. When they encounter discrepancies they use this information to revise their model or improve their experiment, an iterative process that mirrors the real scientific method much more closely than the simplistic hypothesis-experiment-conclusion sequence that permeates the pre-college curriculum.
Student Preconceptions We subsequently selected 13 students whose answers to the quiz needed more explanation or were contradictory to other answers provided on the quiz. Conflicting Models
This confusion can lead to a conflict between a student's mental model and his observations. Take, for example, the student who learns that "hot things cool off and cold things warm up" - in other words, objects in thermal contact with their environment tend to take on the temperature of that environment. On a cold winter day, take such a student outdoors, show her a tree, and ask her whether it is the same temperature as, say, the school's metal flagpole. Following her newly acquired mental model, she may be tempted to say the two objects, having come to equilibrium with their shared environment, are at the same temperature. But if she touches them both with her ungloved hand she is bound to realize that the flagpole feels a lot colder than the tree. Her abstract mental model concerning temperature gradients, heat flows, and the inevitable approach to thermal equilibrium (the essence of the Second Law of Thermodynamics) is in direct conflict with her everyday experience that metal objects feel colder than wooden ones at the same temperature. To help resolve the conflict, we designed some preliminary activities involving human body temperature versus room temperature and tried them out on some students. This spring we will try the activity again with fast-response temperature probes (see article, page 7) that will enable the students to quickly compare the higher temperature data of their body first hand to that of their surroundings.
By confronting students' mental models with the evidence of real time data, we have watched the students adjust their theories. For example, during past and recent testing, the students made the statement that "heat cannot move around corners." After heating metal bars embedded with temperature probes in different configurations, the students quickly realized that heat can travel through the metal no matter what the alignment of the bars. Yet, they still hold to some of their original theories: although heat moves around the corners it "moves more slowly." In future work with the students, we plan to challenge this misconception with side-by side set-ups with different metal bar configurations, careful analysis of the graphs, and a stopwatch. Real World Models Carolyn Staudt is the curriculum developer for the Data and Models Project carolyn@concord.org |
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Our second intuition was that student models about temperature are affected greatly by the fact that the students are themselves temperature detectors and heat engines. As mammals, all students maintain a relatively constant internal temperature that is usually significantly higher than that of their surroundings. All students are familiar with the method of estimating the temperature of something by touching it. Since their finger is in contact with a heat bath (blood) at a nominal 98.6oF, it does not cool down to the temperature of the object it is touching, but generally reaches equilibrium at some higher temperature. The apparent temperature of the external object has more to do with its thermal diffusivity - its ability to conduct heat away from the hot finger - than with its actual temperature.