Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research (Sep 2015)

Brief, embedded, spontaneous metacognitive talk indicates thinking like a physicist

  • Eleanor C. Sayre,
  • Paul W. Irving

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.11.020121
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 020121

Abstract

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[This paper is part of the Focused Collection on Upper Division Physics Courses.] Instructors and researchers think “thinking like a physicist” is important for students’ professional development. However, precise definitions and observational markers remain elusive. We reinterpret popular beliefs inventories in physics to indicate what physicists think thinking like a physicist entails. Through discourse analysis of upper-division students’ speech in natural settings, we show that students may appropriate or resist these elements. We identify a new element in the physicist speech genre: brief, embedded, spontaneous metacognitive talk (BESM talk). BESM talk communicates students’ in-the-moment enacted expectations about physics as a technical field and a cultural endeavor. Students use BESM talk to position themselves as physicists or nonphysicists. Students also use BESM talk to communicate their expectations in four ways: understanding, confusion, spotting inconsistencies, and generalized expectations.