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Talking Circuits. The Development and Assessment of a Digitally-Scaffolded, Collaborative Method for Teaching and Learning Electrical Circuits in Early Secondary Schools

Studien zum Physik- und Chemielernen, Band 394

Thomas Sean Weatherby

ISBN 978-3-8325-6008-9
327 Seiten, Erscheinungsjahr: 2025
Preis: 57.00 €
https://doi.org/10.30819/6008
PDF – OpenAccess

Learning about electric circuits demands abstract thinking, new vocabulary and using concepts that contrast with learners' prior knowledge. Drawing on helpful ideas from everyday experiences with pressure, such as bike tyres and balloons, and evidence from cognitive science, I present an accessible approach using the electron gas model for the first time in English. Building on the design principles of digital tools and collaborative learning, I designed a tablet-based system to scaffold small-group talk to foster conceptual change: "Talking Circuits". This prompting tool enabled real-time assessment of student-student talk, so that lengthy and expensive collaborative learning interventions could be more easily implemented. In a comparative study of 228 learners, aged 12 to 14, I compared two conditions taught using the electron gas model: one using standard classroom materials and the second adding the "Talking Circuits" application. Concept knowledge and motivation were measured in pre- and post-tests.

Results show no significant changes in learning outcomes. The only statistically significant, albeit small, changes were reductions in perceived competence. This tentatively points to the need for longer implementation timeframes and teacher professional development. Learning electricity is demanding; conceptual change likely needs more time than typical British timetables allow.

Thomas Sean Weatherby is a British physics education researcher and teacher educator. He studied physics at the University of Oxford and the Technical University of Munich and completed his PGCE at the University of York alongside his doctorate in physics education from Goethe University Frankfurt. His research focuses on collaborative, digitally supported learning and on the design and validation of diagnostic instruments for conceptual understanding. His dissertation, Talking Circuits, develops and evaluates a tablet-based scaffolding tool within a sequence of lessons on simple electric circuits at lower secondary level and was recognised with a BJET Fellowship. Currently a postdoctoral researcher at Goethe University Frankfurt, he continues to work on projects investigating augmented-reality support in physics labs and the cross-cultural validation of concept inventories.

Keywords:
  • Physics Education
  • Science Education
  • Peer discussion
  • Computer-supported collaborative learning
  • Conceptual understanding

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57.00 €
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