HELPING UNDERGRADUATES REPAIR FAULTY MENTAL MODELS IN THE STUDENT LABORATORY

Over half of the undergraduate students entering physiology hold a misconception concerning how breathing pattern changes when minute ventilation increases. Repair of this misconception was used as a measure to compare the impact of three student laboratory protocols on learning by 696 undergraduate...

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Veröffentlicht in:Advances in physiology education 2000-06, Vol.23 (1), p.82-90
Hauptverfasser: Modell, Harold I, Michael, Joel A, Adamson, Tom, Goldberg, Jack, Horwitz, Barbara A, Bruce, David S, Hudson, Margaret L, Whitescarver, Shirley A, Williams, Stephen
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Over half of the undergraduate students entering physiology hold a misconception concerning how breathing pattern changes when minute ventilation increases. Repair of this misconception was used as a measure to compare the impact of three student laboratory protocols on learning by 696 undergraduate students at 5 institutions. Students were tested for the presence of the misconception before and after performing a laboratory activity in which they measured the effect of exercise on tidal volume and breathing frequency. The first protocol followed a traditional written "observe and record" ("cookbook") format. In the second treatment group, a written protocol asked students to complete a prediction table before running the experiment ("predictor"protocol). Students in the third treatment group were given the written "predictor" protocol but were also required to verbalize their predictions before running the experiment ("instructor intervention" protocol). In each of the three groups, the number of students whose performance improved on the posttest was greater than the number of students who performed less well on the posttest ( P P
ISSN:1043-4046
1522-1229
DOI:10.1152/advances.2000.23.1.s82