The impact of students' epistemological framing on a task requiring representational consistency
Alexandru Maries, Shih-Yin Lin, and Chandralekha Singh

TL;DR
This study investigates how students' epistemological framing influences their ability to maintain consistent representations of the electric field in a physics problem, revealing that the type of knowledge activated affects their representational coherence.
Contribution
It provides qualitative insights into how epistemological framing impacts representational consistency in physics problem-solving, highlighting the role of different knowledge types.
Findings
Students' lack of consistency is partly due to the knowledge triggered by different representations.
Epistemological framing influences how students approach and connect different representations.
Different representations may activate incompatible knowledge, leading to inconsistency.
Abstract
The ability to flexibly transform between different representations (e.g., from mathematical to graphical representations) of the same concept is a hallmark of expertise. Prior research suggests that many introductory physics students show lack of representational consistency, e.g., they may construct two representations of the same concept in the same situation that are inconsistent with one another. In this case study, we asked students to construct two representations for the electric field for a situation involving Gauss's law with spherical symmetry (charge conducting sphere surrounded by charged conducting spherical shell). Prior research also suggests that this type of problem results in many students constructing representations that are not consistent with one another. Here we present findings from individual interviews with three students about this problem which suggest that…
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