High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics

The main research question of this study was: How do selected high school chemistry students' understandings of the elements, structure, and periodicity of the Periodic Table change as they participate in a unit study consisting of inquiry-based activities emphasizing construction of innovative...

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Main Author: Roddy, Knight Phares
Other Authors: Earl Cheek
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: LSU 2003
Subjects:
Online Access:http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0325103-162304/
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spelling ndltd-LSU-oai-etd.lsu.edu-etd-0325103-1623042013-01-07T22:48:25Z High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics Roddy, Knight Phares Curriculum and Instruction The main research question of this study was: How do selected high school chemistry students' understandings of the elements, structure, and periodicity of the Periodic Table change as they participate in a unit study consisting of inquiry-based activities emphasizing construction of innovative science graphics? The research question was answered using a multiple case study/mixed model design which employed elements of both qualitative and quantitative methodologies during data collection and analyses. The unit study was conducted over a six-week period with 11th-grade students enrolled in a chemistry class. A purposive sample of six students from the class was selected to participate in interviews and concept map coconstruction (Wandersee & Abrams, 1993) periodically across the study. The progress of the selected students of the case study was compared to the progress of the class as a whole. The students of the case study were also compared to a group of high school chemistry students at a comparative school. The results show that the students from both schools left traditional instruction on the periodic table (lecture and textbook activities) with a very limited understanding of the topic. It also revealed that the inquiry-based, visual approach of the unit study helped students make significant conceptual progress in their understanding of the periodic table. The pictorial periodic table (which features photographs of the elements), used in conjunction with the graphic technique of data mapping, enhanced students understanding of the patterns of the physical properties of the elements on the periodic table. The graphic technique of compound mapping helped students learn reactivity patterns between types and groups of elements on the periodic table. The recreation of the periodic table with element cards created from the pictorial periodic table helped students progress in their understanding of periodicity and its key concepts. The Periodic Table Literacy Rubric (PTLR) proved to be a valuable tool for assessing students conceptual progress, and helped to identify a critical juncture in the learning of periodicity. In addition, the PTLR rubric's historical-conceptual design demonstrates how the history of science can be used to inform today's science teaching. Earl Cheek Rita Culross Frank Cartledge Richard Haymaker James Wandersee LSU 2003-04-04 text application/pdf http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0325103-162304/ http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0325103-162304/ en unrestricted I hereby grant to LSU or its agents the right to archive and to make available my thesis or dissertation in whole or in part in the University Libraries in all forms of media, now or hereafter known. I retain all proprietary rights, such as patent rights. I also retain the right to use in future works (such as articles or books) all or part of this thesis or dissertation.
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language en
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sources NDLTD
topic Curriculum and Instruction
spellingShingle Curriculum and Instruction
Roddy, Knight Phares
High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics
description The main research question of this study was: How do selected high school chemistry students' understandings of the elements, structure, and periodicity of the Periodic Table change as they participate in a unit study consisting of inquiry-based activities emphasizing construction of innovative science graphics? The research question was answered using a multiple case study/mixed model design which employed elements of both qualitative and quantitative methodologies during data collection and analyses. The unit study was conducted over a six-week period with 11th-grade students enrolled in a chemistry class. A purposive sample of six students from the class was selected to participate in interviews and concept map coconstruction (Wandersee & Abrams, 1993) periodically across the study. The progress of the selected students of the case study was compared to the progress of the class as a whole. The students of the case study were also compared to a group of high school chemistry students at a comparative school. The results show that the students from both schools left traditional instruction on the periodic table (lecture and textbook activities) with a very limited understanding of the topic. It also revealed that the inquiry-based, visual approach of the unit study helped students make significant conceptual progress in their understanding of the periodic table. The pictorial periodic table (which features photographs of the elements), used in conjunction with the graphic technique of data mapping, enhanced students understanding of the patterns of the physical properties of the elements on the periodic table. The graphic technique of compound mapping helped students learn reactivity patterns between types and groups of elements on the periodic table. The recreation of the periodic table with element cards created from the pictorial periodic table helped students progress in their understanding of periodicity and its key concepts. The Periodic Table Literacy Rubric (PTLR) proved to be a valuable tool for assessing students conceptual progress, and helped to identify a critical juncture in the learning of periodicity. In addition, the PTLR rubric's historical-conceptual design demonstrates how the history of science can be used to inform today's science teaching.
author2 Earl Cheek
author_facet Earl Cheek
Roddy, Knight Phares
author Roddy, Knight Phares
author_sort Roddy, Knight Phares
title High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics
title_short High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics
title_full High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics
title_fullStr High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics
title_full_unstemmed High School Chemistry Students Learning of the Elements, Structure, and Periodicity of the Periodic Table: Contributions of Inquiry-Based Activities and Exemplary Graphics
title_sort high school chemistry students learning of the elements, structure, and periodicity of the periodic table: contributions of inquiry-based activities and exemplary graphics
publisher LSU
publishDate 2003
url http://etd.lsu.edu/docs/available/etd-0325103-162304/
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