141
        
        
          July 26–30, 2014
        
        
          
            Wednesday afternoon
          
        
        
          
            Session GE:  PER: Evaluating Instruc-
          
        
        
          
            tional Strategies II
          
        
        
          Location:       Tate Lab 131
        
        
          Sponsor:       AAPT
        
        
          Date:             Wednesday, July 30
        
        
          Time:             1–2:50 p.m.
        
        
          Presider: Eleanor Sayre
        
        
          GE01:
        
        
          1-1:10 p.m.   Interplay Between Beliefs and Learning in
        
        
          Mixed-level Introductory Physics
        
        
          Contributed – Brent W. Barker, Roosevelt University, Chicago, IL 60605;
        
        
        
          Kayla Fouch, Roosevelt University
        
        
          Introductory calculus and non-calculus physics classes are combined into
        
        
          a single section with an additional calculus discussion section afterwards.
        
        
          Others have found a correlation between student beliefs about learning
        
        
          physics and conceptual learning. We investigate this correlation within
        
        
          our mostly life-sciences population and explore the effect of the calculus
        
        
          discussion section on these beliefs and learning.
        
        
          GE02:
        
        
          1:10-1:20 p.m.   Conceptual Gains with Embodied
        
        
          Learning in Resistive Circuits
        
        
          Contributed – Alex M. Barr, Howard Community College, College Park, MD
        
        
          20740; 
        
        
        
          Mark Baumann, Randi Ludwig, University of Texas at Austin
        
        
          We report on conceptual learning gains associated with an embodied
        
        
          learning activity for resistive circuits. The activity, Circuit Theater, involves
        
        
          students playing the role of electric charges as they act out the behavior of
        
        
          various circuits involving batteries and light bulbs. A subset of questions
        
        
          from the Determining and Interpreting Resistive Electric Circuits Con-
        
        
          cepts Test (DIRECT) were administered before and after Circuit Theater
        
        
          activities in a calculus-based physics course at Howard Community Col-
        
        
          lege. Normalized gains for students participating in Circuit Theater average
        
        
          49% after one week of activities. We also report on possible learning reten-
        
        
          tion suggested by performance on the unit exam and the final exam.
        
        
          GE03:
        
        
          1:20-1:30 p.m.   Teaching Quantum Mechanics through
        
        
          Project-based Learning
        
        
          Contributed –  Gintaras K. Duda, Creighton University, Omaha, NE 68178;
        
        
        
          Although there has been interest in problem/project-based learning in
        
        
          the PER community as an active engagement strategy, most work done to
        
        
          date, however, has focused on introductory courses. This talk will explore
        
        
          research on upper-division quantum mechanics, a junior/senior level
        
        
          course at Creighton University, which was taught using PBL pedagogy with
        
        
          no in-class lectures. Course time was primarily spent on lecture tutorials
        
        
          and projects, which included the alpha decay of Uranium, neutrino oscilla-
        
        
          tions, spin oscillations/NMR, and FTIR spectroscopy of HCl. This talk will
        
        
          describe how PBL pedagogy was implement in an upper-division physics
        
        
          course and will explore student learning in light of the new pedagogy and
        
        
          embedded metacognitive self-monitoring exercises, and the effect of the
        
        
          PBL curriculum on student attitudes, motivation, and epistemologies.
        
        
          GE04:
        
        
          1:30-1:40 p.m.   Quantum Interactive Learning Tutorial
        
        
          (QuILT) on Mach Zehnder Interferometer with Single
        
        
          Photons*
        
        
          Contributed – Chandralekha Singh, University of Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh, PA
        
        
          15260; 
        
        
        
          Emily Marshman, University of Pittsburgh
        
        
          We are developing and assessing a quantum interactive learning tuto-
        
        
          rial (QuILT) on Mach Zehnder Interferometry with single photons to
        
        
          expose students to contemporary applications of quantum mechanics.
        
        
          The QuILT strives to help students develop the ability to apply quantum
        
        
          principles in physical situations, explore differences between classical and
        
        
          quantum ideas, and organize knowledge hierarchically. The QuILT also
        
        
          helps students learn about delayed choice experiments, first proposed by
        
        
          John Wheeler. It adapts visualization tools to help students build physical
        
        
          intuition about non-intuitive quantum phenomena and focuses on helping
        
        
          them integrate qualitative and quantitative understanding and discriminate
        
        
          between concepts that are often confused. Details of the development and
        
        
          assessment will be discussed. We thank the National Science Foundation
        
        
          for support.
        
        
          *We thank the National Science Foundation for support.
        
        
          GE05:
        
        
          1:40-1:50 p.m.   Developing Metacognitive Skills in Con-
        
        
          junction with Conceptual Understanding of Physics*
        
        
          Contributed – Nathaniel C. Grosz, North Dakota State University, Department
        
        
          of Physics, Fargo, ND 58108-6050;
        
        
        
          Mila Kryjevskaia, MacKenzie R. Stetzer, University of Maine
        
        
          Effective learners possess a diverse repertoire of metacognitive skills that
        
        
          they consciously deploy to support and guide their thinking. Adopting new
        
        
          thinking approaches is complex and demanding for novice learners, but
        
        
          the process can be facilitated by instructors actively supporting the devel-
        
        
          opment of students’ metacognitive skills. As part of an ongoing investiga-
        
        
          tion of student reasoning approaches in physics courses, we wish to iden-
        
        
          tify instructional strategies that are effective at promoting the development
        
        
          of metacognitive skills in conjunction with the development of conceptual
        
        
          understanding of physics. We have been probing the effectiveness of such
        
        
          strategies across multiple learning environments (e.g., interactive lectures,
        
        
          laboratory). We will present data from question sequences purposefully
        
        
          designed to evoke metacognitive behavior. Results from individual and
        
        
          group work will be presented and compared. Implications for instruction
        
        
          will be discussed.
        
        
          *This work is supported in part by the National Science Foundation under Grant Nos.
        
        
          DUE-1245313, DUE-1245999, and DUE-0962805.
        
        
          GE06:
        
        
          1:50-2 p.m.   Classroom Observation Coding to Study
        
        
          Success Factors in Studio Physics
        
        
          Contributed – Larry Medsker, George Washington University, 725 21st St.
        
        
          NW, Washington, DC 20052; 
        
        
        
          Gerald Feldman, Noel Klingler, Zoe Pierce, George Washington University
        
        
          Improvements in student learning through interactive-engagement
        
        
          methods have been inconsistent over a range of institutions. Possible
        
        
          factors for these variations include institutional differences and instructor
        
        
          effectiveness. As part of a project to explore the key elements of successful
        
        
          algebra-based studio courses, we are conducting systematic observations
        
        
          and analyses of various classroom environments with regard to teach-
        
        
          ing methods, cognitive engagement, and instructor-student interactions.
        
        
          Our data are recorded as a chronological series of codes in the Teaching
        
        
          Dimensions Observational Protocol (TDOP) which reflect the classroom
        
        
          activities taking place at particular times. In order to test the efficacy of the
        
        
          TDOP computer-based tool, we are using an evidence-based approach for
        
        
          choosing an efficient set of codes grounded in PER. We will discuss the
        
        
          coding design process and our insights into studio-mode courses. We will
        
        
          outline the important factors impacting active learning in the classroom
        
        
          and discuss how the observations inform the broader study of successful
        
        
          studio physics.
        
        
          GE07:
        
        
          2-2:10 p.m.   Identifying the Different Implementations of
        
        
          Studio Physics: Document Analysis
        
        
          Contributed – Ozden Sengul, Georgia State University, Atlanta, GA 30303;
        
        
        
          Joshua Von Korff, Georgia State University
        
        
          Physics education research (PER) indicates that research-based instruc-
        
        
          tional strategies (RBIS) such as studio classes and research-based text
        
        
          materials (Physics by Inquiry) could be used widely to improve students’
        
        
          learning gains and conceptual understanding. However, the effectiveness