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

Combination of interventions can change students’ epistemological beliefs

  • Calvin S. Kalman,
  • Mandana Sobhanzadeh,
  • Robert Thompson,
  • Ahmed Ibrahim,
  • Xihui Wang

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.11.020136
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 2
p. 020136

Abstract

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This study was based on the hypothesis that students’ epistemological beliefs could become more expertlike with a combination of appropriate instructional activities: (i) preclass reading with metacognitive reflection, and (ii) in-class active learning that produces cognitive dissonance. This hypothesis was tested through a five-year study involving close to 1000 students at two institutions, in four physics courses. Using an experimental design, data from student interviews, writing product assessments, and the Discipline-Focused Epistemological Beliefs Questionnaire (DFEBQ) we demonstrate that the beliefs of novice science learners became more expertlike on 2 of the 4 DFEBQ factors. We conclude that a combination of an activity that gets students to examine textual material metacognitively (Reflective Writing) with one or more types of in-class active learning interventions can promote positive change in students’ epistemological beliefs.