TY - JOUR
T1 - Alignment between student epistemological views and experiences with course structures in introductory physics
T2 - Physics Education Research Conference, PERC 2023
AU - Ouellette, Ellen
AU - Lewsirirat, Sarat
AU - Sebastian, Ryan Biju
AU - Lundsgaard, Morten
AU - Krist, Christina
AU - Kuo, Eric
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2023, American Association of Physics Teachers. All rights reserved.
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - Designing physics courses that support students’ activation and development of expert-like physics epistemologies is a significant goal of Physics Education Research. However, very little research has focused on how physics students’ interactions with course structures resonate with different epistemological views. As part of a course redesign effort to increase student success in introductory physics, we interviewed introductory physics students about their experiences with course structures and their learning and belonging beliefs. We present here a case from this broader data corpus in which a student, Robyn, discusses his epistemological views of physics problem solving and his experiences with physics lectures, office hours, and discussion sections. We find that Robyn’s physics epistemology manifests consistently across his interactions with each of these different course structures, suggesting a possible resonance between students’ beliefs and their experiences with course structures and the value of further investigation into the potential merits of comprehensive course design.
AB - Designing physics courses that support students’ activation and development of expert-like physics epistemologies is a significant goal of Physics Education Research. However, very little research has focused on how physics students’ interactions with course structures resonate with different epistemological views. As part of a course redesign effort to increase student success in introductory physics, we interviewed introductory physics students about their experiences with course structures and their learning and belonging beliefs. We present here a case from this broader data corpus in which a student, Robyn, discusses his epistemological views of physics problem solving and his experiences with physics lectures, office hours, and discussion sections. We find that Robyn’s physics epistemology manifests consistently across his interactions with each of these different course structures, suggesting a possible resonance between students’ beliefs and their experiences with course structures and the value of further investigation into the potential merits of comprehensive course design.
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U2 - 10.1119/perc.2023.pr.Ouellette
DO - 10.1119/perc.2023.pr.Ouellette
M3 - Conference article
AN - SCOPUS:85176352179
SN - 1539-9028
SP - 260
EP - 265
JO - Physics Education Research Conference Proceedings
JF - Physics Education Research Conference Proceedings
Y2 - 19 July 2023 through 20 July 2023
ER -