Probing the impact of graph-based salient distracting features on student reasoning
ORAL
Abstract
Previous research on students' mathematical reasoning from introductory mechanics to upper-division thermodynamics courses revealed that student reasoning and performance on graph-based integration tasks were impacted by specific features of those graphs. We are using dual-process theories of reasoning (DPToR) to probe the extent to which the nature of human reasoning itself may account for inconsistent reasoning on graph-based integration tasks containing salient distracting features (SDFs). In the current study, we have been examining student reasoning on graph-based integration tasks in the calculus-based introductory physics sequence by administering questions in which the salience of the SDFs is varied. Screening-target question pairs and reasoning chain construction tasks have also been used in the investigation. We will discuss recent results emerging from our ongoing work.
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Presenters
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Liam Martinez
University of Maine
Authors
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Liam Martinez
University of Maine
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MacKenzie R Stetzer
University of Maine
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John R. Thompson
University of Maine