Physical Review Physics Education Research (Aug 2023)

Effect of representation format on conceptual question performance and eye-tracking measures

  • Ana Susac,
  • Maja Planinic,
  • Andreja Bubic,
  • Katarina Jelicic,
  • Marijan Palmovic

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevPhysEducRes.19.020114
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 19, no. 2
p. 020114

Abstract

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Previous studies have shown the important role of different representations in the teaching and learning of physics. In this study, we used eye tracking to investigate the effect of different representations on the process of answering conceptual questions. We compared students’ scores and eye-tracking measures on isomorphic questions which contained graphical, pictorial, and verbal representations. On average, in two-thirds of cases, students were consistent in their answers (correct or incorrect) across all three representations. There was no statistically significant difference in students’ scores for different representations. However, eye-tracking measures suggest that it was easiest for students to extract information from verbal representations and most difficult from pictorial representations for the conceptual questions used in this study. These results could be useful to teachers and researchers when creating conceptual questions and, more generally, when teaching with multiple representations.