Effectiveness of interactive tutorials in promoting "which-path" information reasoning in advanced quantum mechanics
Alexandru Maries, Ryan Sayer, and Chandralekha Singh

TL;DR
This study evaluates interactive tutorials designed to improve advanced students' understanding of 'which-path' information reasoning in quantum mechanics, demonstrating their effectiveness across related experiments.
Contribution
The paper introduces and assesses interactive tutorials on Mach-Zehnder interferometer and double-slit experiments that enhance students' reasoning about interference and which-path information.
Findings
Tutorials promoted correct which-path reasoning
Students transferred reasoning skills between experiments
Tutorials improved understanding of interference phenomena
Abstract
We have been investigating advanced students' learning of quantum mechanics concepts and have developed interactive tutorials which strive to help students learn these concepts. Two such tutorials, focused on the Mach-Zehnder interferometer (MZI) and the double-slit experiment (DSE), help students learn how to use the concept of "which-path" information to reason about the presence or absence of interference in these two experiments in different situations. After working on a pretest that asked students to predict interference in the MZI with single photons and polarizers of various orientations placed in one or both paths of the MZI, students worked on the MZI tutorial which, among other things, guided them to reason in terms of which-path information in order to predict interference in similar situations. We investigated the extent to which students were able to use reasoning related…
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