Tuesday, September 8, 2015

Course assignment - Reflection 2


Summary of the reading

The reading this week, Conceptual change: a powerful framework for improving science teaching and learning, examines the ideology behind conceptual change in science education.  The thought behind conceptual change is that student’s concepts of subject matter change as they gain exposure to new ideas and concepts in various subject matter.  The article presents “concerns how students’ conceptions change under the impact of new ideas and new evidence” (Posner, Strike, Hewson & Gertzog, 1982). Essentially teachers can use conceptual change as a teaching strategy to present inquiry bases lessons. Using a conceptual change framework, students use their prior knowledge, to include misconceptions, in order to formulate new concepts and new ways of thinking.  This type of conceptual change challenges students to question their own thinking and trigger metacognitive skills. In the context of science, students have to rationalize and make sense of the world around them. The article has a centralized focus on the different types of radical conceptual change described as accommodations throughout the article.  The authors detail how 5 various concepts influence the direction of an accommodation, those influential factors include anomalies, analogies and metaphors, epistemological commitments, metaphysical beliefs and concepts, and other knowledge.  Interviews with physics students and their instructors are presented as examples of conceptual change in the aticle.  The interviews are also used as a way to assess the implementation of accommodations in certain settings.  Finally, the article defines the role of the teacher in conceptual change, and traditional teacher roles are not sufficient enough to fully embrace this framework. Teachers can not present and clarify concepts, but instead need to challenge students and remain combative with students about their ideas, reasons, a rational for their thinking.   


Ideas for possible proposals

Under the conceptual change framework, a possible proposal might be surrounded around energy efficiency.  The Texas Performance Standards Project has an energy efficiency exploration project that allows students to examine renewable and non-renewable energy sources.  In this project, students would analyze various types of energy consumption by human beings in daily life.  Students would create an actual record of all of the devices that humans depend on in both home and school environments.  Students will have to recognize the effects of the identified types of energy consumption on a local, state, national, and global level.  The students can develop ways to conserve energy usage and find viable ways to reduce, reuse, and recycle. The movie Wall-E might be used at the end or the beginning of the lesson to trigger discussions on the effects of waste and the importance of reducing, reusing, and recycling resources on our planet.  In addition, one collaborator in this proposal could be the Electric Company.  The students would take a trip to the El Paso Electric Company to gain a better insight into how the electric company powers the electricity for the city. In my opinion this is an excellent way to raise awareness in students regarding environmental studies and implement a conceptual change approach which would be embedded in this type of proposal. 

Concerns and questions for the readings or proposals

“The classical conceptual change approach involved the teacher making students’ alternative frameworks explicit prior to designing a teaching approach consisting of ideas that do not fit the students’ existing ideas and thereby promoting dissatisfaction” (Duit & Treagust, 2003).  Therefore, my question about the reading is what methods are used to address misconceptions when students are not aware that their own level of understanding is incorrect?

References

Duit, R., & Treagust, D. F. (2003). Conceptual change: a powerful framework for improving        science teaching and learning. International journal of science education, 25(6), 671-688.

 Posner, G. J., Strike, K. A., Hewson, P. W., & Gertzog, W. A. (1982). Accommodation of a                         scientific conception: Toward a theory of conceptual change. Science education, 66(2), 211-               227.

1 comment:

  1. Melissa:
    Your question about what methods are used to address misconceptions when students are not aware of their own level of understanding is incorrect, can be satisfied with the judicious teaching of the scientific method. When done correctly science inquiry methods will produce good science and understanding of the content. When students do not make that conceptual change during and at the end of the experiment we know now from the article that there are circumstances for this to happen.
    The article identifies Conceptual change, supplies new language and its meaning about the subject, and gives approach ideas from the educator and from the students’ view. I perceive that this article is to make aware to the educator that students have their own views and as educators we must be cognizant about this when we plan, give, and assess a classroom. I myself will remember this next time when students balks at a subject.

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