Over the past 50 years there has been much research in the area of students' misconceptions. Whilst this research has been useful in helping to inform the design of instructional approaches and curriculum development it has not provided much insight into how students reason when presented with a novel situation and, in particular, the knowledge they draw upon in an attempt to make predictions about that novel situation. This article reports on a study of Greek students, aged from 10 to 17 years old, who were asked to make predictions in novel situations and to then provide, without being told whether their predictions were correct or incorrect, explanations about their predictions. Indeed, their explanations in such novel situations have...
Pupils come to physics lessons with some scientifically wrong ideas, sometimes referred to as miscon...
The use of analogies as reasoning tools that play a key role in human cognition at all ages has been...
Pupils come to physics lessons with some scientifically wrong ideas, sometimes referred to as miscon...
Over the past 50 years there has been much research in the area of students’ misconceptions. Whilst...
Since the mid-1970s a large body of research in science education has focused on identifying studen...
Analogies as tools for meaning making have been of interest to scientists, educators and philosopher...
Analogies as tools for meaning making have been of interest to scientists, educators and philosopher...
This small scale pilot study was the first stage of a larger cross age study designed to investigat...
This cross age study was designed to investigate students’ predictions in novel situations and the r...
In a recent letter to the editor (2016 Phys. Educ. 51 066503), Schumayer and Scott raised concerns ...
Research in science education has extensively defended the use of analogies as an effective instruct...
In this paper, we report on a cross-age in which students were asked to make predictions in situatio...
This cross age study was designed to investigate students’ predictions in novel situations and the r...
Research in science education has extensively defended the use of analogies as an effective instru...
This cross age study was designed to investigate how students make predictions in novel situations a...
Pupils come to physics lessons with some scientifically wrong ideas, sometimes referred to as miscon...
The use of analogies as reasoning tools that play a key role in human cognition at all ages has been...
Pupils come to physics lessons with some scientifically wrong ideas, sometimes referred to as miscon...
Over the past 50 years there has been much research in the area of students’ misconceptions. Whilst...
Since the mid-1970s a large body of research in science education has focused on identifying studen...
Analogies as tools for meaning making have been of interest to scientists, educators and philosopher...
Analogies as tools for meaning making have been of interest to scientists, educators and philosopher...
This small scale pilot study was the first stage of a larger cross age study designed to investigat...
This cross age study was designed to investigate students’ predictions in novel situations and the r...
In a recent letter to the editor (2016 Phys. Educ. 51 066503), Schumayer and Scott raised concerns ...
Research in science education has extensively defended the use of analogies as an effective instruct...
In this paper, we report on a cross-age in which students were asked to make predictions in situatio...
This cross age study was designed to investigate students’ predictions in novel situations and the r...
Research in science education has extensively defended the use of analogies as an effective instru...
This cross age study was designed to investigate how students make predictions in novel situations a...
Pupils come to physics lessons with some scientifically wrong ideas, sometimes referred to as miscon...
The use of analogies as reasoning tools that play a key role in human cognition at all ages has been...
Pupils come to physics lessons with some scientifically wrong ideas, sometimes referred to as miscon...