Supporting submicroscopic reasoning in students’ explanations of absorption phenomena using a simulation-based activity†

IF 2.6 2区 教育学 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Natalia Spitha, Yujian Zhang, Samuel Pazicni, Sarah A. Fullington, Carla Morais, Amanda Rae Buchberger and Pamela S. Doolittle
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Abstract

The Beer–Lambert law is a fundamental relationship in chemistry that helps connect macroscopic experimental observations (i.e., the amount of light exiting a solution sample) to a symbolic model composed of system-level parameters (e.g., concentration values). Despite the wide use of the Beer–Lambert law in the undergraduate chemistry curriculum and its applicability to analytical techniques, students’ use of the model is not commonly investigated. Specifically, no previous work has explored how students connect the Beer–Lambert law to absorption phenomena using submicroscopic-level reasoning, which is important for understanding light absorption at the particle level. The incorporation of visual-conceptual tools (such as animations and simulations) into instruction has been shown to be effective in conveying key points about particle-level reasoning and facilitating connections among the macroscopic, submicroscopic, and symbolic domains. This study evaluates the extent to which a previously reported simulation-based virtual laboratory activity (BLSim) is associated with students’ use of particle-level models when explaining absorption phenomena. Two groups of analytical chemistry students completed a series of tasks that prompted them to construct explanations of absorption phenomena, with one group having completed the simulation-based activity prior to the assessment tasks. Student responses were coded using Johnstone's triad. When comparing work from the two student groups, chi-square tests revealed statistically significant associations (with approximately medium to large effect sizes) between students using the simulation and employing particle-level reasoning. That said, submicroscopic-level reasoning did not always provide more explanatory power to students’ answers. Additionally, we observed the productive use of a variety of submicroscopic light–matter interaction models. We conjecture that engaging with BLSim provided new submicroscopic-level resources for students to leverage in explanations and predictions of absorption phenomena.

利用模拟活动为学生解释吸收现象提供亚显微推理支持†。
比尔-朗伯定律是化学中的一个基本关系,有助于将宏观实验观察结果(即流出溶液样品的光量)与由系统级参数(如浓度值)组成的符号模型联系起来。尽管比尔-朗伯定律在本科生化学课程中被广泛使用,而且适用于分析技术,但学生对该模型的使用情况并不常见。具体来说,以前的研究没有探讨过学生如何利用亚显微级推理将比尔-朗伯定律与吸收现象联系起来,而亚显微级推理对于理解微粒级的光吸收现象非常重要。在教学中融入视觉概念工具(如动画和模拟)已被证明能有效传达粒子级推理的要点,并促进宏观、亚显微和符号领域之间的联系。本研究评估了之前报道的基于模拟的虚拟实验室活动(BLSim)与学生在解释吸收现象时使用粒子级模型的关联程度。两组分析化学学生完成了一系列促使他们构建吸收现象解释的任务,其中一组在评估任务之前完成了基于模拟的活动。学生的回答采用约翰斯通三要素进行编码。在比较两组学生的作业时,卡方检验显示,学生在使用模拟和运用粒子级推理之间存在显著的统计学关联(影响大小约为中等到较大)。尽管如此,亚微粒级推理并不总能为学生的答案提供更多的解释力。此外,我们还观察到对各种亚显微光-物质相互作用模型的有效使用。我们推测,使用 BLSim 为学生解释和预测吸收现象提供了新的亚显微级资源。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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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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