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A survey of junior college physics curricula and teacher preparationWorkman, Wanda Villareal de January 2010 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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A program for individualized instruction in senior high school physicsTillisch, Frederick Eugene January 2010 (has links)
Digitized by Kansas Correctional Industries
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Problem solving in introductory physics : demons and difficulties.Lin, Herbert S January 1979 (has links)
Thesis (Sc.D.)--Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Dept. of Physics, 1979. / MICROFICHE COPY AVAILABLE IN ARCHIVES AND SCIENCE / Bibliography: p. 424-432. / Sc.D.
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Quaternions: A History of Complex Noncommutative Rotation Groups in Theoretical PhysicsFamilton, Johannes C. January 2015 (has links)
The purpose of this dissertation is to clarify the emergence of quaternions in order to make the history of quaternions less opaque to teachers and students in mathematics and physics. ‘Quaternion type Rotation Groups’ are important in modern physics. They are usually encountered by students in the form of: Pauli matrices, and SU(2) & SO(4) rotation groups. These objects did not originally appear in the neat form presented to students in modern mathematics or physics courses. What is presented to students by instructors is usually polished and complete due to many years of reworking. Often neither students of physics, mathematics or their instructors have an understanding about how these objects came into existence, or became incorporated into their respected subject in the first place. This study was done to bridge the gaps between the history of quaternions and their associated rotation groups, and the subject matter that students encounter in their course work.
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Physics students' approaches to learning and cognitive processes in solving physics problemsBouchard, Josée. January 2005 (has links)
No description available.
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Facets, common frameworks and central variable of advanced-level students' understanding of D.C. circuitsAnding, Philip Nuli January 2012 (has links)
No description available.
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The teaching of chemistry and physics in secondary schoolsRose, Francis Winfred January 1927 (has links)
No description available.
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Working the network : initiating a new science and technology courseHepburn, Gary Roy 05 1900 (has links)
This study explores the introduction of a new applied physics course into a British
Columbia high school during the 1994-1995 school year. The course was part of a
provincial effort aimed at making science and technology education more
responsive to the workplace. Data collection took place during the first year the
applied physics course was being piloted at the school and focused on the pilot
teacher and the applied physics classes, but also involved others inside and
outside the school who had a connection to the course. A variety of methods were
used in data collection including interviews, observation, and document analysis.
Using actor-network theory and sociocultural theory, the focus of the research is
on the networks that were constructed at the pilot school and at the provincial
level where the course was conceptualized and developed. The research describes
how the teacher and other network builders attempted to enroll various human
and nonhuman actors into the networks they were constructing in support of the
course. They did this by convincing the actors that the course was compatible
with their interests. The types of actors that were enrolled, the sociocultural
communities they belonged to, and what it took to convince them to support the
course are shown to shape the way that the course was enacted in the classroom.
In addition, it is demonstrated that the network that was constructed at the
provincial level had only a minor connection to the one the teacher was
constructing at the school level. The lack of contact between the two networks
meant that the interests of those who were involved in organizing the applied
physics pilots at the provincial level were seldom taken into account in the course
at the school. Fourteen conclusions are drawn about the networks that were
constructed and the network building process at both the school and provincial
levels. These conclusions have implications for policy in educational change
initiatives and for addressing problems that emerge when cross-subject courses
are introduced. The research also develops a new theoretical approach that will
contribute to advancing research on educational change.
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Open laboratory activities in physics for the science and nonscience student : a creative projectAppleton, Raymond M. January 1975 (has links)
This creative project was written to provide learning materials that would facilitate student use of open physics laboratories in modular scheduled schools or schools operating under the open concept.The writer identified the needs and interests in physics for both the science and nonscience student. Using these topics of interest, nine open physics laboratory acttivities for science and nonscience students were written. Each activity was designed to offer a "hands-on" activity supplimented with pictures, diagrams, and a minimal of written material.An attempt was made to divide each activity into two parts or phases with each phase being more difficult (i. e., using more advanced scientific terms and/or mathematics). This structure was chosen so as to interest and motivate the nonscience student or low ability science student and not bore the ambitious science student.
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Physics students' approaches to learning and cognitive processes in solving physics problems / Approaches to learning and cognitive processesBouchard, Josée. January 2005 (has links)
This study examined traditional instruction and problem-based learning (PBL) approaches to teaching and the extent to which they foster the development of desirable cognitive processes, including metacognition, critical thinking, physical intuition, and problem solving among undergraduate physics students. The study also examined students' approaches to learning and their perceived role as physics students. The research took place in the context of advanced courses of electromagnetism at a Canadian research university. The cognitive science, expertise, physics and science education, instructional psychology, and discourse processes literature provided the framework and background to conceptualize and structure this study. A within-stage mixed-model design was used and a number of instruments, including a survey, observation grids, and problem sets were developed specifically for this study. A special one-week long problem-based learning (PBL) intervention was also designed. Interviews with the instructors participating in the study provided complementary data. / Findings include evidence that students in general engage in metacognitive processes in the organization of their personal study time. However, this potential, including the development of other cognitive processes, might not be stimulated as much as it could in the traditional lecture instructional context. The PBL approach was deemed as more empowering for the students. An unexpected finding came from the realisation that a simple exposure to a structured exercise of problem-solving (pre-test) was sufficient to produce superior planning and solving strategies on a second exposure (post-test) even for the students who had not been exposed to any special treatment. Maturation was ruled out as a potential threat to the validity of this finding. Another promising finding appears to be that the problem-based learning (PBL) intervention tends to foster the development of cognitive competencies, particularly physical intuition, even if it was only implemented for a short period of time. Other findings relate to the nature of the cognitive actions and activities that the students engage in when learning to solve electromagnetism problems in a PBL environment for the first time and the tutoring actions that guide students in this context.
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