General relativity in upper secondary school: Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Standard

General relativity in upper secondary school : Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction. / Kersting, Magdalena; Henriksen, Ellen Karoline; Bøe, Maria Vetleseter; Angell, Carl.

In: Physical Review Physics Education Research, Vol. 14, 010130, 2018.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Kersting, M, Henriksen, EK, Bøe, MV & Angell, C 2018, 'General relativity in upper secondary school: Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction', Physical Review Physics Education Research, vol. 14, 010130. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevphyseducres.14.010130

APA

Kersting, M., Henriksen, E. K., Bøe, M. V., & Angell, C. (2018). General relativity in upper secondary school: Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction. Physical Review Physics Education Research, 14, [010130]. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevphyseducres.14.010130

Vancouver

Kersting M, Henriksen EK, Bøe MV, Angell C. General relativity in upper secondary school: Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction. Physical Review Physics Education Research. 2018;14. 010130. https://doi.org/10.1103/physrevphyseducres.14.010130

Author

Kersting, Magdalena ; Henriksen, Ellen Karoline ; Bøe, Maria Vetleseter ; Angell, Carl. / General relativity in upper secondary school : Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction. In: Physical Review Physics Education Research. 2018 ; Vol. 14.

Bibtex

@article{eaa6ef64a09e4a06ad2ca80a9ca5d73f,
title = "General relativity in upper secondary school: Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction",
abstract = "Because of its abstract nature, Albert Einstein{\textquoteright}s theory of general relativity is rarely present in school physics curricula. Although the educational community has started to investigate ways of bringing general relativity to classrooms, field-tested educational material is rare. Employing the model of educational reconstruction, we present a collaborative online learning environment that was introduced to final year students (18–19 years old) in six Norwegian upper secondary physics classrooms. Design-based research methods guided the development of the learning resources, which were based on a sociocultural view of learning and a historical-philosophical approach to teaching general relativity. To characterize students{\textquoteright} learning from and interaction with the learning environment we analyzed focus group interviews and students{\textquoteright} oral and written responses to assigned problems and discussion tasks. Our findings show how design choices on different levels can support or hinder understanding of general relativity, leading to the formulation of design principles that help to foster qualitative understanding and encourage collaborative learning. The results indicate that upper secondary students can obtain a qualitative understanding of general relativity when provided with appropriately designed learning resources and sufficient scaffolding of learning through interaction with teacher and peers.",
author = "Magdalena Kersting and Henriksen, {Ellen Karoline} and B{\o}e, {Maria Vetleseter} and Carl Angell",
year = "2018",
doi = "10.1103/physrevphyseducres.14.010130",
language = "English",
volume = "14",
journal = "Physical Review Physics Education Research",
issn = "2469-9896",
publisher = "American Physical Society",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - General relativity in upper secondary school

T2 - Design and evaluation of an online learning environment using the model of educational reconstruction

AU - Kersting, Magdalena

AU - Henriksen, Ellen Karoline

AU - Bøe, Maria Vetleseter

AU - Angell, Carl

PY - 2018

Y1 - 2018

N2 - Because of its abstract nature, Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity is rarely present in school physics curricula. Although the educational community has started to investigate ways of bringing general relativity to classrooms, field-tested educational material is rare. Employing the model of educational reconstruction, we present a collaborative online learning environment that was introduced to final year students (18–19 years old) in six Norwegian upper secondary physics classrooms. Design-based research methods guided the development of the learning resources, which were based on a sociocultural view of learning and a historical-philosophical approach to teaching general relativity. To characterize students’ learning from and interaction with the learning environment we analyzed focus group interviews and students’ oral and written responses to assigned problems and discussion tasks. Our findings show how design choices on different levels can support or hinder understanding of general relativity, leading to the formulation of design principles that help to foster qualitative understanding and encourage collaborative learning. The results indicate that upper secondary students can obtain a qualitative understanding of general relativity when provided with appropriately designed learning resources and sufficient scaffolding of learning through interaction with teacher and peers.

AB - Because of its abstract nature, Albert Einstein’s theory of general relativity is rarely present in school physics curricula. Although the educational community has started to investigate ways of bringing general relativity to classrooms, field-tested educational material is rare. Employing the model of educational reconstruction, we present a collaborative online learning environment that was introduced to final year students (18–19 years old) in six Norwegian upper secondary physics classrooms. Design-based research methods guided the development of the learning resources, which were based on a sociocultural view of learning and a historical-philosophical approach to teaching general relativity. To characterize students’ learning from and interaction with the learning environment we analyzed focus group interviews and students’ oral and written responses to assigned problems and discussion tasks. Our findings show how design choices on different levels can support or hinder understanding of general relativity, leading to the formulation of design principles that help to foster qualitative understanding and encourage collaborative learning. The results indicate that upper secondary students can obtain a qualitative understanding of general relativity when provided with appropriately designed learning resources and sufficient scaffolding of learning through interaction with teacher and peers.

U2 - 10.1103/physrevphyseducres.14.010130

DO - 10.1103/physrevphyseducres.14.010130

M3 - Journal article

VL - 14

JO - Physical Review Physics Education Research

JF - Physical Review Physics Education Research

SN - 2469-9896

M1 - 010130

ER -

ID: 301450409