Physical Review Physics Education Research (Nov 2022)

Visual representation of optical content in China’s and Singapore’s junior secondary physics textbooks

  • Bing Wei,
  • Chengran Wang,
  • Lihua Tan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.18.020138
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 2
p. 020138

Abstract

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Visual representation in school textbooks plays an important role for physics teaching and learning. The integration of graphics with text has drawn attention of physics educators in recent years due to the close relationship between graphics and relevant text. The purpose of this study is to examine visual representation of optical content in three physics textbooks commonly used in China and Singapore. Based on a revised version of graphical analysis protocol, this study focuses on two aspects of visual representation: (i) presentation of graphics, and (ii) integration of graphics with corresponding text. The content analysis approach was adopted as the research methodology with 115 graphics taken from the three physics textbooks being the analysis target. The results show that the three textbooks had considerable differences in terms of graphical presentations and that they contained a small percentage of high systematical representations. On integration of graphics with text, each textbook was found to be unique. Based on the results of this study, some recommendations are provided for visual representation in physics textbooks so as to enhance the effectiveness of textbooks on teaching and learning, such as highlighting physical and semantic integration of text with graphics.