Blending physical knowledge with mathematical form in physics problem solving
Mark Eichenlaub, Edward F. Redish

TL;DR
This study explores how students can meaningfully blend physical intuition with mathematical formalism in physics problem solving, revealing strategies that foster expert-like understanding and reasoning.
Contribution
It demonstrates that teaching specific problem-solving strategies enables students to integrate intuition and formalism, improving their conceptual understanding in physics.
Findings
Students used strategies like examining extreme cases to connect intuition and formalism.
Students accessed more expert-like conceptual systems through these strategies.
Strategies helped students develop and apply physical intuition more effectively.
Abstract
Equations are about more than computing physical quantities or constructing formal models; they are also about understanding. The conceptual systems physicists use to think about nature are made from many different resources, formal and not, working together and inextricably linked. By blending mathematical forms and physical intuition, physicists breathe meaning into the equations they use. In contrast, in physics class, novice students often treat mathematics as only a calculational tool, isolating it from their rich knowledge of the physical world. We are interested in cases where students break that pattern by reading, manipulating, and building equations meaningfully rather than purely formally. To find examples of this and explore the diversity of ways students combine formal and intuitive resources, we conducted problem-solving interviews with students in an introductory physics…
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Taxonomy
TopicsInnovative Teaching and Learning Methods · Science Education and Pedagogy · Educational Strategies and Epistemologies
