Phys. Rev. ST Phys. Educ. Res. 5, 013101 (2009) [5 pages]Peaks and decays of student knowledge in an introductory E&M course
Eleanor C. Sayre and Andrew F. Heckler Received 22 September 2008; published 12 February 2009 A common format for assessment of learning is pretesting and post-testing. In this study, we collect student test data several times per week throughout a course, allowing for the measurement of the changes in student knowledge with a time resolution on the order of a few days. To avoid the possibility of test-retest effects, separate and quasirandom subpopulations of students are tested on a variety of tasks. We report on data taken in a calculus-based introductory E&M class populated primarily by engineering majors. Unsurprisingly for a traditional introductory course, there is little change in many conceptual questions. However, the data suggest that some student performance peaks and decays rapidly during a quarter, a pattern consistent with memory research yet unmeasurable by pretesting and post-testing. In addition, it appears that some course topics can interfere with prior knowledge, decreasing performance on questions related to earlier topics in the course. ©2009 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.5.013101 [ Abstract | Previous article | Next article | Issue 1 ] |
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