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Sources of Students' Confusion and Misconceptions. Scientific models used to teach the concepts are often abstractThere often is unexplored conflict between students' everyday experiences and the classroom or textbook presentations.Students' views about abstract concepts do not evolve as quickly a
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1. Misconceptions, Preconceptionsand Naive Beliefs Ken Miller
Montana State University-Billings
2. Sources of Students Confusion and Misconceptions Scientific models used to teach the concepts are often abstract
There often is unexplored conflict between students everyday experiences and the classroom or textbook presentations.
Students views about abstract concepts do not evolve as quickly as the rate of concept presentation in most classrooms and most textbooks.
3. Sources of Students Confusion and Misconceptions Instructional materials used to convey abstract concepts are often two-dimensional diagrams with symbols.
Many students lack the formal level of thinking and spatial skills to make sense of textbook presentation.
4. Elementary Children elaborate on the textbook: On the living body: Inside the ear we have a hammer, an anvil and a stirrup. So ears have a good excuse to ache sometimes!
Look in an ear. If there arent three bones in there, then that is not an ear you are looking in!
5. Elementary Children elaborate on the textbook: On the living body: An appendix is something found in the back of the book, sometimes they get in people and have to be taken out.
The skull has 22 bones in it. I know of at least one person who claims this is interesting.
6. Elementary Children elaborate on the textbook: On the living body: The pistol of the flower is the only protection against insects
The alimentary canal is located in the northern part of Indiana
For drowning, Climb on top of the person and move up and down to make artificial perspiration
7. Elementary Children elaborate on the textbook: On the living body: For fainting:
rub the persons chest or if a lady, rub her arm above the hand instead or put the head between the knees of the nearest medical doctor.
8. Elementary Children elaborate on the textbook: On the living body: Liter.
A nest of young puppies
Vacuum.
A large empty space where the pope lives
Blood flows down one leg and up the other
9. The Acquisition of Vocabulary Magnet
Something you find crawling all over a dead cat.
Genetics
Explains why you look like your father and if you dont, why you should.
10. Mimetic Responses Water is composed of two gins, Oxygin and Hydrogin. Oxygin is pure gin. Hydrogin is gin and water.
11. Mimetic Responses The body consists of three parts- the brainium, the borax, and the abominable cavity. The brainium contains the brain, the borax contains the heart and lungs, and the abominable cavity contains the bowls. a, e, i, o, and u
12. % of 5th Graders who say alive Sun
Candle
Water
Lightning
Volcano
Bicycle
13. Percent of 5th Graders Saying Alive Sun
53%
Candle
47%
Water
62%
14. Percent of 5th Graders Saying Alive Lightning
82%
Volcano
76%
Bicycle
36%
15. Childrens Understandings are Built upon Prior Knowledge and Experiences Trent Age 6
What makes the clouds move?
The wind.
How does the wind make the clouds move?
By blowing on them.
16. Childrens Understandings are Built upon Prior Knowledge and Experiences When the wind blows on the clouds, where do they go?
Somewhere else!!!!
Where do you think?
Hardin, Montana
Why do they go to Hardin?
Because my Grandma lives there.
17. Night and Day- 7 year oldStepans, J. The Journal of Natural Inquiry. Winter 1988 (2) 2 What is night?
When it gets dark and the stars and the moon come out.
Why is it dark at night?
Because you cant go to sleep in the daytime.
18. Night and Day- 7 year oldStepans, J. The Journal of Natural Inquiry. Winter 1988 (2) 2 Where does the darkness come from?
Black paper.
What is day?
White paper and when the sky is clear its blue paper.
19. Night and Day- 7 year oldStepans, J. The Journal of Natural Inquiry. Winter 1988 (2) 2 What makes the day change to night?
They change the paper!
20. Inquiry Learning Strategies Can Promote Conceptual Change In order to understand your students misconceptions, you first have to confront their beliefs.
21. Inquiry Learning Strategies Can Promote Conceptual Change In order to confront their beliefs, you have to ask them what it is they believe!
22. Todd Age 7Miller, K. 1994 The Teacher Educator Dad. Has anyone ever been to the moon?
Sure, lots of people. I think........
about 21 people have been to the moon. Of course they all did not .....
Well, they didnt spend the night did they?
Sure they spent the night. They had to because it is too far away.
23. Todd Age 7Miller, K. 1994 The Teacher Educator Todd, have you ever seen the moon and the sun at the same time?
Oh......yeah.
We are going to have to rethink this one Dad.
24. Maureen Age 9 Thunder and Lightning What do you think clouds are made of?
Water and air. The air holds the water up until it gets too heavy.
Why would two clouds made of water and air make electricity when they hit together?
Sometimes they hit over a telephone pole.
25. Maureen Age 9 Thunder and Lightning And that is when there is lightning?
Yes.
What about thunder?
Thats the noise that clouds make when they hit together.
Why is it so loud?
It is really quiet but the sky is so big it echoes and sounds louder.
26. Maureen Age 9 Thunder and Lightning Can there be thunder without lightning?
Yes, because sometimes there is no telephone pole.
27. What Are We Learning About the Learner? Young Learners are not little adults. They look at the world differently. Many learners come into the learning environment with naive ideas about the world and leave with the same ideas. Young learners are not immediately convinced about things, they go through constant restructuring