Impact of Context-Rich, Multifaceted Problems on Students' Attitudes Towards Problem-Solving
C.A. Ogilvie

TL;DR
This study examines how engaging with context-rich, multifaceted problems influences university students' beliefs and attitudes towards problem-solving, showing a shift towards more conceptual and diagrammatic strategies over a semester.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence on how complex problems affect students' problem-solving beliefs and demonstrates a positive attitude shift through reflective analysis.
Findings
Decrease in Rolodex equation matching strategy
Increase in diagram use and conceptual thinking
Positive attitude change towards problem-solving
Abstract
Most students struggle when faced with complex and ill-structured tasks because the strategies taught in schools and universities simply require finding and applying the correct formulae or strategy to answer well-structured, algorithmic problems. For students to develop their ability to solve ill-structured problems, they must first believe that standardized procedural approaches will not always be sufficient for solving ill-structured engineering and scientific challenges. In this paper we document the range of beliefs university students have about problem-solving. Students enrolled in a physics course submitted a written reflection both at the start and the end of the course on how they solve problems. We coded approximately 500 of these reflections for the presence of different problem-solving approaches. At the start of the semester over 50% of the students mention in written…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovative Teaching and Learning Methods · Science Education and Pedagogy · Online Learning and Analytics
