• Title/Summary/Keyword: students' concepts

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Primary Students' Conceptions on Atmospheric Pressure (초등학교 학생들의 기압에 대한 개념조사)

  • Chae, Dong-Hyun;Baik, Eun-Mi
    • Journal of The Korean Association For Science Education
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    • v.17 no.3
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    • pp.239-249
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    • 1997
  • Primary students' conceptions on the atmospheric pressure and its related concepts were investigated. Samples consisted of 41 5th grade and 43 6th grade primary school students. Two types of research methods were used: 1) the open-ended written questionnare;2) paper-pencil test. Naive theories on the atmospheric pressure and its related concepts were numerous. For example, 80% students thought that as we go higher into the atmosphere, the atmospheric pressure becomes greater. Also, 50% students thought that the hot air had greater the atmospheric pressure than the cold air. This study was also discussed the teaching strategies to overcome these naive theories on the atmospheric pressure and its related concepts.

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Offer Calculus to High School Students: The Use of Technologies Can Clear up People's Doubts

  • Wang, Gaoxia;Zhu, Yan
    • Research in Mathematical Education
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    • v.6 no.2
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    • pp.117-122
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    • 2002
  • From the beginning of the 20th century, calculus is gradually offered to high school students in many countries. However, in Chinese high school, the instruction on calculus is nearly an untouched field. Many people don't believe that high school students can study calculus well. They think calculus knowledge in students' brains is likely to become the “half-cooked food”, and this can produce a bad effect on the study of formal calculus at university. The authors consider that the emphasis of calculus in high school should be the intuitive understanding of fundamental calculus concepts, and it is also the basis of the understanding of formal concepts. Traditional mathematics course with chalk can't meet the needs of calculus teaching. The use of technologies can enhance the calculus teaching, especially the informal and visual calculus teaching, help students understand the underlying concepts. The authors describe how the use of technologies can improve the calculus teaching and learning, and point out that the use of technologies can clear up people's doubts.

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Elementary School Students' Mathematical Metaphors for Line Segments, Straight Lines, and Rays

  • Sangmee Kim
    • Research in Mathematical Education
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    • v.26 no.4
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    • pp.271-289
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    • 2023
  • This research investigates the development of elementary students' concepts of line segments, straight lines, and rays, employing metaphor analysis as a research methodology. By analyzing metaphorical expressions, the research aims to explore how elementary students form these geometric concepts line segments, straight lines, and lays and evolve their understanding of them across different grades. Surveys were conducted with elementary school students in grades three to six, focusing on metaphorical expressions and corresponding their reasons associated with line segments, straight lines, and rays. The data were analyzed through coding and categorization to identify the types in students' metaphorical expressions. The analysis of metaphorical expressions identified five types: straightness, infinity or direction, connections of another geometric concepts, shape and symbols, and terminology.

The Effects of Physics Teaching-Learning Method Using Storytelling on Scientific Attitudes and Perception of Concepts Understanding (스토리텔링을 활용한 물리 교수·학습 방법이 과학적 태도와 개념 이해 인식에 미치는 효과)

  • Son, Jeongwoo
    • Journal of Science Education
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    • v.41 no.2
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    • pp.213-225
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    • 2017
  • Most students have difficulties and negative perceptions about physics learning. Especially, it is difficult to understand the whole context by learning based on logical-scientific thinking which excludes narrative thinking. This study aims to develop a storytelling teaching-learning method using the narrative thinking in physics lessons for improving the difficulty of students of physics learning, For this purpose, a storytelling teaching-learning method that can improve scientific attitude and understand and change the concepts was developed through literature research. The following results were confirmed its effects to apply high school students and middle school students. First, the teaching-learning method using the storytelling for high school students with low interest in learning had a significant effect in science-related occupation, interest in science and science-related activities, criticism, openness, cooperation, and spontaneity. Second, the middle school students who are active in learning recognized that teaching and learning methods using storytelling helped to understand physics concepts. The storytelling teaching-learning method developed through this study is expected to stimulate students' interest and motivation in physics and to be useful for learning concepts by improving their scientific thinking skills.

Effects of medical communication curriculum on perceptions of Korean medical school students

  • Yoo, Hyo Hyun;Shin, Sein;Lee, Jun-Ki
    • Korean journal of medical education
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    • v.30 no.4
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    • pp.317-326
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    • 2018
  • Purpose: The study examines changes in students' self-assessment of their general communication (GC) and medical communication (MC) competencies, as well as perceptions of MC concepts. Methods: Participants included 108 second year medical students enrolled at a Korean medical school studying an MC curriculum. It was divided into three sections, and participants responded to questionnaires before and after completing each section. To assess perceived GC and MC competency, items based on a 7-point Likert scale were employed; a single open-ended item was used to examine students' perceptions of MC. Statistical analysis was conducted to gauge GC and MC competency, whereas semantic network analysis was used to investigate students' perceptions of MC. Results: Students perceived their GC competency to be higher than MC. Perceived MC competency differed significantly across the three sections, whereas no differences were found for GC. There were no statistically significant differences after completing the curriculum's second and third sections; however, the vocabulary students used to describe MC concepts became more scholarly and professional. In the semantic networks, the link structure between MC-related words decreased in linearity and looseness, becoming more complex and clustered. The words 'information' and 'transfer' proved integral to students' perceptions; likewise, 'empathy' and 'communication' became closely connected in a single community from two independent communities. Conclusion: This study differed from prior research by conducting an in-depth analysis of changes in students' perceptions of MC, and its findings can be used to guide curriculum development.

Teaching Linear Algebra to High School Students

  • Choe, Young-Han
    • Research in Mathematical Education
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    • v.8 no.2
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    • pp.107-114
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    • 2004
  • University teachers of linear algebra often feel annoyed and disarmed when faced with the inability of their students to cope with concepts that they consider to be very simple. Usually, they lay the blame on the impossibility for the students to use geometrical intuition or the lack of practice in basic logic and set theory. J.-L. Dorier [(2002): Teaching Linear Algebra at University. In: T. Li (Ed.), Proceedings of the International Congress of Mathematicians (Beijing: August 20-28, 2002), Vol. III: Invited Lectures (pp. 875-884). Beijing: Higher Education Press] mentioned that the situation could not be improved substantially with the teaching of Cartesian geometry or/and logic and set theory prior to the linear algebra. In East Asian countries, science-orientated mathematics curricula of the high schools consist of calculus with many other materials. To understand differential and integral calculus efficiently or for other reasons, students have to learn a lot of content (and concepts) in linear algebra, such as ordered pairs, n-tuple numbers, planar and spatial coordinates, vectors, polynomials, matrices, etc., from an early age. The content of linear algebra is spread out from grades 7 to 12. When the high school teachers teach the content of linear algebra, however, they do not concern much about the concepts of content. With small effort, teachers can help the students to build concepts of vocabularies and languages of linear algebra.

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The Analysis of Concept on The Rotation of The Earth of Elementary Students According to Difference of Spatial Ability (초등학생의 공간능력 수준차이에 따른 지구자전에 관한 개념 분석)

  • Kim, Su-Jeong;Kim, Hyoung-Bum;Han, Shin;Jeong, Jin-Woo
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Earth Science Education
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    • v.5 no.1
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    • pp.20-30
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    • 2012
  • The purpose of this study is to find how elementary students who have different spatial ability affects their understandings on the concept of the rotation of the earth. In order to perform this study, four 5th grade students were picked out of 85 students in Seoul. They had the same conceptual achievement on the movement of celestial bodies but had different spatial abilities. The results of this study were as follows : Regardless of their spatial ability, they understand how day and night are performed, and understand the fact that diurnal motions of moon are related to the rotation of the earth. Also, the students who had higher spatial abilities showed better understanding on the concept of the rotation of the earth and understood the reconstructed concepts in stereoscopic space. But the students who had lower spatial abilities did not fully understand the concept of the rotation of the earth and just memorized them as fragmentary concepts. As for the gender differences, the boy students who had higher spatial ability explained the concept clearly and the others who had lower spatial ability had difficulty in understanding the rotation direction of the earth related with the diurnal movement of celestial bodies. In the same manner, the girl students who had higher spatial ability explained the concepts concretely and the others who had lower spatial ability had difficulty in explaining the concepts by operating them stereoscopically. Therefore, developing teaching methods and studying data and so on, for the girl students, they should be trained to operate the stereoscopic space directly, and for the boy students, they should learn to think over objects with multi-viewpoints. And then the spatial ability on the movement of celestial bodies would be expected to be improved.

A Discussion on the Distinction between 'The Value of Ratio' and 'The Rate' in Elementary School Mathematics (초등학교 수학에서 비의 값과 비율 개념의 구별에 대한 논의)

  • 장혜원
    • School Mathematics
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    • v.4 no.4
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    • pp.633-642
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    • 2002
  • This paper focuses on the concepts of a value of ratio and a rate in elementary school mathematics. Although the concept of a value of ratio can be distinguished meaningfully from that of a rate by phenomenological analyses, this distinction is impossible at the elementary school level. Two concepts tend to be treated as identical, therefore they need to be classified by the other methods. By analyzing the series of mathematics textbooks from the first curriculum to the present 7th curriculum, this paper investigated how two concepts have been transposed into the products of school mathematics. In addition, we discussed how the difference of two concepts in the changing process of definitions have been presented clearly to the students. As a result, this paper concluded that the difference of two concepts has not been developed clearly for elementary students in general, except the textbook by the 7th curriculum. The definitions of two concepts were described obscurely so that the students may confuse the concept of a value of ratio with that of a rate. The role of a value of ratio needs to be reconsidered when it is applied to set proportional expressions. Therefore, this paper suggests not adhering to the terminology ‘value of ratio’ to present the ratio as a quotient or the rate as a fractional representation in school mathematics.

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- A Study on Motivations for Parenthood and Parental Role Concepts in Korean College Students - (대학생의 부모됨 동기와 부모역할개념에 관한 연구)

  • 유안진
    • Journal of the Korean Home Economics Association
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    • v.31 no.4
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    • pp.141-155
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    • 1993
  • The purpose of this study is to investigate Korean youth's motivations for parenthood and concepts of parental role and to examine closely the relationship with the sociodemographic variables(age, sex, religious orientation, growth region, father's occupational level, parental education degree). the subjects are 465 students of the three universities in National Capital region. The data are collected by questionnair methods and analyzed by t-test, F-test, factor analysis. The major findings are as follows: 1) The motivations for parenthood are classified into five factors. These are acquisition of social status factor, continuation of self factor, achevement and creativity factor, tradition factor, primary group ties factor. The korean youth think the most of achievement and creativity factor among five motivation factors. 2) The korean students have somewhat stereo-typed concepts of parental role and place the stress on training the behaviors of the child and encouraging the development of the child. 3) The sociodemographic variables to have relationship with the motivations for parenthood are age, sex, growth region and father and mother's educational degrees. And the variables related with the concepts of parental role are sex, father's occupational level. 4) There are relationships between traditional role concepts of a father and motivation of acquisition of social status factor and tradition factor. And traditional role concepts of a mother are related with motivations of acquisition of social status factor and primary group ties factor among the motivations for parenthood.

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The Effectiveness of Metacognitive Instruction Models on the Acquisition of Magnetic Field Concepts (초인지 수업 모형이 자기장 개념 형성에 미치는 효과)

  • Lee, Hee-Jung;Kang, Dae-Hun;Paik, Seoung-Hey
    • Journal of Korean Elementary Science Education
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    • v.22 no.2
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    • pp.149-155
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    • 2003
  • The objective of this research was to study the impact of metacognitive lesson models on the formation of magnetic field concepts. The subjects of this research was eighty students from two sixth grade classes. One class of forty of these students was the experimental group, which the metacognitive strategic lesson model was applied, and the other class of forty students was the control group which the traditional lessons were conducted. As the result of the experiment, the experimental group and the control group, which previously did not show difference in terms of achievement of conceptualizing magnetic field, displayed a significant difference. According to the comparison between the pre-experiment test on the students' previous concepts and the achievement of the students after the experiment, the middle group showed difference between the experimental group and the control group in a small degree. The lower group showed a notable difference between the two groups and the higher group showed no difference. In terms of achievements shown in different questions asked, there was little difference in the questions that were stated in the textbook while there was a significant difference in the questions that applied the contents of the textbook. The higher academic group, according to the test on the previous concepts, did not show much difference between the experimental group and the control group when they were asked about the concepts of the textbook. In terms of the comparison in the metacognitive levels, both the higher and lower metacognitive experimental groups' average grade was higher than the control groups' and showed an important statistical difference.

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