Publication | Closed Access
Research as a guide for curriculum development: An example from introductory spectroscopy. II. Addressing student difficulties with atomic emission spectra
22
Citations
18
References
2015
Year
Teacher EducationInquiry-based LearningScience EducationStem EducationTeachingMathematics EducationIntroductory SpectroscopyDiscrete Line SpectrumStudent LearningCurriculum & InstructionEducationClassroom InstructionAddressing Student DifficultiesAtomic Emission SpectraCurriculum DevelopmentCurriculum
This is the second of two closely related articles (Paper I and Paper II) that together illustrate how research in physics education has helped guide the design of instruction that has proved effective in improving student understanding of atomic spectroscopy. Most of the more than 1000 students who participated in this four-year investigation were science majors enrolled in the introductory calculus-based physics course at the University of Washington (UW) in Seattle, WA, USA. The others included graduate and undergraduate teaching assistants at UW and physics majors in introductory and advanced physics courses at the University of Zagreb, Zagreb, Croatia. About half of the latter group were preservice high school physics teachers. Paper I describes how several conceptual and reasoning difficulties were identified among university students as they tried to relate a discrete line spectrum to the energy levels of atoms in a light source. This second article (Paper II) illustrates how findings from this research informed the development of a tutorial that led to improvement in student understanding of atomic emission spectra.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1