68
        
        
          
            Monday afternoon
          
        
        
          with students, on- or off-line. When online, the Reader App connects to
        
        
          the OSP collection at the comPADRE digital library, for the download of
        
        
          additional ready-to-use, tablet-enabled simulations.
        
        
          *Sponsored by Danny Caballero
        
        
          CA02:
        
        
          4-6 p.m.   Multimedia Learning with Remote Labs
        
        
          and Virtual Experiments
        
        
          Panel – Raimund Girwidz, Ludwig-Maximilians-University, Munich, Theresien-
        
        
          str. 37 München, DE 80333 Germany;
        
        
        
          Remote laboratories and virtual experiments can promote discovery-
        
        
          learning. Online experimental opportunities with real instruments in
        
        
          combination with supplementary simulations offer new possibilities for
        
        
          learning. From a pedagogical point of view, the direct combination of
        
        
          experimental studies with simulations and additional guidance is essential
        
        
          to contextualize learning, connect with theoretical reflection and thereby
        
        
          promote a deeper understanding. The following theoretical considerations
        
        
          are included: a) Offer additional representations to visualize essentials, b)
        
        
          support the development of mental models and link abstract concepts with
        
        
          realistic examples, c) use special features to promote “cognitive flexibility”,
        
        
          d) use illustrations to structure knowledge, e) ensure a sufficient depth of
        
        
          processing f) avoid cognitive overload by sequencing information. Also
        
        
          some findings from empirical studies will be discussed, showing factors
        
        
          and conditions that are important to reach these goals.
        
        
          CA03:
        
        
          4-6 p.m.   Multimedia in Acoustics
        
        
          Panel – Leopold Mathelitsch, Inst. Physics, Univ. Graz Univ.platz 5 Graz,
        
        
          Styria A-8010 Austria; 
        
        
        
          Visualization of acoustical phenomena can be regarded as true multimedia:
        
        
          Acoustical input is analyzed by electronic means and the results can be
        
        
          presented simultaneously and also interactively in a graphical way. It is ob-
        
        
          vious that this possibility also has substantial didactical value. For this pur-
        
        
          pose hard- and software have been developed concerning different aspects
        
        
          of acoustical phenomena. The European MPTL group and the American
        
        
          MERLOT consortium joined in a worldwide evaluation of available
        
        
          software on acoustics, leading to recommendations of “best” products with
        
        
          regard to physical content and pedagogical value. The contribution gives
        
        
          an overview of this evaluation procedure and presents examples exhibiting
        
        
          the richness of the acoustical world. These include investigations of sound
        
        
          taken from our technical and natural surroundings and analyses of musical
        
        
          instruments culminating in the most valuable one, the human voice.
        
        
          CA04:
        
        
          4-6 p.m.   Using Moodle to Design Physics Online Courses
        
        
          with Virtual and Remote Laboratories Based on EJS
        
        
          Panel – Luis De La Torre, UNED, Calle Juan del Rosal, 16 Madrid, Madrid
        
        
          28040 Spain;
        
        
        
          Ruben Heradio, Jose Sanchez, Sebastian Dormido, UNED
        
        
          Easy Java Simulations (EJS) helps to create interactive simulations in
        
        
          Java, mainly for teaching and learning purposes. By means of this tool,
        
        
          instructors can easily create virtual and/or (if they also use the appropriate
        
        
          additional software) remote laboratories. Learning Management Systems
        
        
          (LMS) are software for web applications oriented for the administration,
        
        
          documentation, tracking, and reporting of e-learning programs. Moodle
        
        
          is a free source LMS with more than 60 million users, which makes it
        
        
          the most used LMS around the world. Like some other LMS, the stated
        
        
          philosophy of Moodle includes a constructivist and social constructionist
        
        
          approach to education, emphasizing that learners (and not just teach-
        
        
          ers) can contribute to the educational experience. Virtual and remote
        
        
          laboratories (created with EJS, for example) as well as LMS (Moodle, for
        
        
          example) offer different but fundamental educational tools to both teachers
        
        
          and students. However, although these resources are complementary (and
        
        
          not mutually exclusive), the integration between them is still an open issue
        
        
          that must be addressed. Therefore, an e-learning program should offer both
        
        
          kinds of tools to be considered a complete experience for students. The
        
        
          EJSApp add-ons for Moodle gather together the two previous resources,
        
        
          offering the possibility to build and prepare e-learning programs based on:
        
        
          1) experimentation (thanks to the use of the virtual and remote laborato-
        
        
          ries) and 2) theory documentation provision, social interactivity and easy
        
        
          management (thanks to the use of the LMS).
        
        
          CA05:
        
        
          4-6 p.m.   High-Speed-Video Learning Path on Complex
        
        
          Fluids: From Physical Laws to Cutting-edge Applications
        
        
          Panel – Peppino Sapia, University of Calabria, Ponte Bucci, cubo 31/C
        
        
          Rende, 87036 Italy; 
        
        
        
          Video analysis of Newtonian and non-Newtonian fluids phenomenology
        
        
          provides to the physics teaching/learning process an extremely rich and
        
        
          exciting context to convey concepts, issues and methodologies concerning
        
        
          either traditional physics of fluids or cutting-edge research on materials
        
        
          properties. In this connection, a multimedia learning path is presented,
        
        
          based on high-speed and/or high-resolution video imaging of selected
        
        
          phenomena, easily reproducible in a teaching laboratory. The use of com-
        
        
          mercial grade photo/video cameras, together with freely available video
        
        
          analysis software, allows learners to explore unfamiliar phenomena related
        
        
          to fluids (such as viscoelasticity and super-hydrophobicity), allowing
        
        
          them to get in touch with the principal theoretical concepts and practical
        
        
          applications pertaining a context located at the boundaries among phys-
        
        
          ics, chemistry and biology. The learning path, aimed to students of high
        
        
          school’s last year or university undergraduates, presents both an illustra-
        
        
          tive character (aimed to capture the attention of learners) and more deep
        
        
          quantitative features, giving students and teachers methodological and
        
        
          practical hints to independently conduct and analyze their own teaching
        
        
          experiments. Moreover, presented activities and documental materials give
        
        
          teachers significant examples of the role of video-analysis either in educa-
        
        
          tion or in empirical research.
        
        
          
            Session CB:  Incorporating Metacog-
          
        
        
          
            nition in Physics Instruction and
          
        
        
          
            Assessing Outcomes
          
        
        
          Location:        STSS 220
        
        
          Sponsor:        Committee on Research in Physics Education
        
        
          Date:              Monday, July 28
        
        
          Time:              4–6 p.m.
        
        
          Presider:   Mila Kryjevskaia
        
        
          CB01:
        
        
          4-4:30 p.m.    Scientific Articles and Metacognition –
        
        
          Enhancing Students’ Understanding
        
        
          Invited – Yehudit Judy Dori, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cam-
        
        
          bridge, MA 02139-4307; 
        
        
        
          Reading scientific articles is a vital part of communicating scientific
        
        
          knowledge to high school and undergraduate students, our future citizens,
        
        
          for preparing them to be independent life-long learners. Reading is an
        
        
          active process, which demands constructing new knowledge and linking
        
        
          it to prior knowledge. We have demonstrated the importance of training
        
        
          students in applying a metacognitive tool for facilitating students’ reading
        
        
          and analyzing scientific articles. The tool guides students how and when to
        
        
          use various reading strategies and monitor their own understanding of sci-
        
        
          entific texts. In my talk, I will refer to the metacognitive aspect of scientific
        
        
          literacy and describe two metacognitive studies, one conducted with high
        
        
          school chemistry majors and the other with bio-medical undergraduate
        
        
          students. Finally, I will discuss the implications of these studies to science
        
        
          education in general and physics education in particular.
        
        
          CB02:
        
        
          4:30-5 p.m.    Guiding and Gauging Students’ Reflective
        
        
          Metacognition*
        
        
          Invited – Andrew Boudreaux, Western Washington University, Bellingham,
        
        
          WA 98225-9164;
        
        
        
          Historically, physics education research has guided development of
        
        
          instructional strategies that significantly boost conceptual understanding.
        
        
          Recently, efforts have expanded to more implicit instructional goals, such
        
        
          as promoting expert-like views about what must be done to learn new
        
        
          physics ideas. Progress in promoting the “hidden” curriculum has been
        
        
          slow: most pre/post measurements have in fact yielded negative gains.
        
        
          At Western Washington University, we are exploring ways of promoting
        
        
          student reflection, a backward-looking form of metacognition.* Experts
        
        
          somehow develop the conscious habit of reviewing what they have learned