Physical Review Special Topics. Physics Education Research (Sep 2014)

Extending the theoretical framing for physics education research: An illustrative application of complexity science

  • Jonas Forsman,
  • Rachel Moll,
  • Cedric Linder

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTPER.10.020122
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10, no. 2
p. 020122

Abstract

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The viability of using complexity science in physics education research (PER) is exemplified by (1) situating central tenets of student persistence research in complexity science and (2) drawing on the methods that become available from this to illustrate analyzing the structural aspects of students’ networked interactions as an important dynamic in student persistence. By drawing on the most cited characterizations of student persistence, we theorize that university environments are made up of social and academic systems, which PER work on student persistence has largely ignored. These systems are interpreted as being constituted from rules of interaction that affect the structural aspects of students’ social and academic network interactions from a complexity science perspective. To illustrate this empirically, an exploration of the nature of the social and academic networks of university-level physics students is undertaken. This is done by combining complexity science with social network analysis to characterize structural similarities and differences of the social and academic networks of students in two courses. It is posited that framing a social network analysis within a complexity science perspective offers a new and powerful applicability across a broad range of PER topics.