U-Shaped development of Newtonian concepts: Implications for pedagogical design and research practice
Paul J. Camp

TL;DR
This study investigates the non-linear development of Newtonian concepts in students, revealing a U-shaped learning curve with periods of regression, and discusses implications for teaching strategies and research methodologies.
Contribution
It provides empirical evidence of a U-shaped developmental pattern in Newtonian understanding and offers a hypothesis explaining this phenomenon, influencing pedagogical and research approaches.
Findings
Evidence of non-monotonic conceptual development
Identification of regression periods in understanding
Implications for teaching and research practices
Abstract
In the years 2002-2004, the Learning by Design\texttrademark group at Georgia Tech conducted an investigation of the development of qualitative Newtonian concepts as a function of time. I describe the classroom context and method for this investigation, involving the coordination of multiple measures including diagnostic quizzes, structured interviews, ethnographic observations in class and performance assessments. This paper specifically concerns the results from the diagnostic quizzes, relying on other measures as supporting evidence. I present convincing evidence of conceptual gains from that data. I also show that when looked at in more detail, there is a clear non-monotonic conceptual development process in which there is a period of apparent regression of understanding following apparent satisfactory understanding. I consider prior work on this effect from developmental…
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Taxonomy
TopicsVisual and Cognitive Learning Processes · Design Education and Practice · Science Education and Pedagogy
