Comparing drawing tasks and elaborate single-choice questions simulation-based learning: How do they facilitate students’ conceptual understanding on chemical equilibria?

IF 2.6 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Chemistry Education Research and Practice Pub Date : 2024-05-21 DOI:10.1039/d3rp00113j
Yannik Peperkorn, Jana-Kim Buschmann, Stefanie Schwedler
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Abstract

Past research repeatedly revealed students’ struggles to understand chemical equilibria, especially concerning their dynamic nature. Black-box simulations have proven to be helpful here. However, the effect is strongly dependent on the quality of teaching, the design principles of which are not yet fully known. One aspect of debate concerns the nature of supportive learning tasks, which require students to activate, construct and reflect on their mental models to foster conceptual understanding. In this paper, we investigate how drawing-assisted simulation-based learning promotes conceptual understanding of chemical equilibria in comparison to single-choice tasks. Both types of supporting tasks involve simulation-based activities according to the German instructional design SIMMS (Simulation-based Instruction for Mental Modelling in School), which requires students to construct their own explanations and predictions on a chemical system before exploring it via molecular dynamics simulations and revising their explanations and predictions retrospectively. In a quasi-experimental intervention study with 174 German high school students of ten chemistry courses (tenth grade), two treatment groups (drawing group and single-choice group) were compared with a control group, assessing the progress in conceptual understanding during simulation-based learning via drawings and explanations as well as pre- and post-intervention via questionnaire. Our findings reveal similar effects of drawing tasks and elaborate single-choice tasks on conceptual understanding of chemical equilibria. For equilibrium dynamics specifically, simulation-based settings featuring drawing tasks seem to be slightly more effective than simulation-based settings featuring elaborate single-choice-tasks in fostering understanding. What is more, simulation-based settings on the divergent phenomenon of Le Chatelier (where different final states emerge from the same initial state, depending on the nature of external perturbation) seem to be more efficient than those on the convergent nature of chemical equilibria (where several initial states with different educt/product ratios yield the same final state in equilibrium) in fostering student understanding irrespective of the mode of the supportive learning task.
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比较绘画任务和精心设计的单项选择题模拟学习:它们如何促进学生对化学平衡概念的理解?
过去的研究一再表明,学生在理解化学平衡,特别是其动态性质方面存在困难。事实证明,黑盒模拟在这方面很有帮助。然而,这种效果在很大程度上取决于教学质量,而教学质量的设计原则尚未完全清楚。辩论的一个方面涉及支持性学习任务的性质,这些任务要求学生激活、构建和反思他们的心智模型,以促进概念理解。在本文中,我们研究了与单项选择任务相比,绘画辅助模拟学习如何促进对化学平衡的概念理解。这两类辅助任务都是根据德国的教学设计 SIMMS(基于模拟的学校心理建模教学)开展的模拟活动,要求学生在通过分子动力学模拟探索化学系统之前,先构建自己对化学系统的解释和预测,并对自己的解释和预测进行回顾性修正。在一项针对 174 名德国高中生的准实验干预研究中,十门化学课程(十年级)的两个治疗组(绘图组和单选组)与对照组进行了比较,通过绘图和解释以及干预前后的问卷调查,评估学生在模拟学习过程中对概念理解的进展。我们的研究结果表明,绘画任务和精心设计的单项选择任务对化学平衡概念理解的影响相似。具体就平衡动力学而言,在促进理解方面,以绘画任务为特色的模拟环境似乎比以精心设计的单项选择任务为特色的模拟环境更有效。此外,在促进学生理解方面,无论支持性学习任务的模式如何,以勒沙特列尔的发散现象(根据外部扰动的性质,相同的初始状态会产生不同的最终状态)为主题的模拟设置似乎比以化学平衡的收敛性为主题的模拟设置(在平衡中,具有不同生成物/生成物比率的多个初始状态会产生相同的最终状态)更有效。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
4.80
自引率
26.70%
发文量
64
审稿时长
6-12 weeks
期刊介绍: The journal for teachers, researchers and other practitioners in chemistry education.
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