Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategies

The main objective of the study was to test chemistry students' competence, in the first, second and final years of their BSc course, in some basic problem-solving strategies. Five strategies were tested: clarification and clear representation of problems; focusing sharply on the goal; identification and use of relevant principles; use of equations for calculations and deductions and use of a step-by-step procedure. The study method used was the analysis of students' solutions to questions that were carefully designed to test competence in problem-solving strategies. The study showed that performance was poor in all the problem-solving strategies tested and that there was no improvement in performance as students progressed from year to year. About a half of the students tested (average performance in all of the 11 questions used for testing) had difficulty in answering the questions. Possible reasons for students' difficulties are identified and suggestions are made for rectifying the difficulties. It is suggested that difficulties with the use of cognitive strategies are often not due to students' inability to understand and use them but to insufficient emphasis being placed on them in their courses. Since an increase in competence in cognitive strategies and cognitive skills canbe expected to lead to more efficient learning and problem-solving, not only in education courses but also throughout their lives, there is a need for training students in them until they become automatic and spontaneous mental operations. Such training should be integrated, throughout any course, with the teaching of content knowledge.

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Main Author: Selvaratnam,Mailoo
Format: Digital revista
Language:English
Published: The South African Chemical Institute 2011
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0379-43502011000100006
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spelling oai:scielo:S0379-435020110001000062015-07-16Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategiesSelvaratnam,Mailoo Cognitive strategies thinking problem solving students' difficulties with problem solving The main objective of the study was to test chemistry students' competence, in the first, second and final years of their BSc course, in some basic problem-solving strategies. Five strategies were tested: clarification and clear representation of problems; focusing sharply on the goal; identification and use of relevant principles; use of equations for calculations and deductions and use of a step-by-step procedure. The study method used was the analysis of students' solutions to questions that were carefully designed to test competence in problem-solving strategies. The study showed that performance was poor in all the problem-solving strategies tested and that there was no improvement in performance as students progressed from year to year. About a half of the students tested (average performance in all of the 11 questions used for testing) had difficulty in answering the questions. Possible reasons for students' difficulties are identified and suggestions are made for rectifying the difficulties. It is suggested that difficulties with the use of cognitive strategies are often not due to students' inability to understand and use them but to insufficient emphasis being placed on them in their courses. Since an increase in competence in cognitive strategies and cognitive skills canbe expected to lead to more efficient learning and problem-solving, not only in education courses but also throughout their lives, there is a need for training students in them until they become automatic and spontaneous mental operations. Such training should be integrated, throughout any course, with the teaching of content knowledge.The South African Chemical InstituteSouth African Journal of Chemistry v.64 20112011-01-01journal articletext/htmlhttp://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0379-43502011000100006en
institution SCIELO
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country Sudáfrica
countrycode ZA
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databasecode rev-scielo-za
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region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
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author Selvaratnam,Mailoo
spellingShingle Selvaratnam,Mailoo
Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategies
author_facet Selvaratnam,Mailoo
author_sort Selvaratnam,Mailoo
title Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategies
title_short Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategies
title_full Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategies
title_fullStr Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategies
title_full_unstemmed Chemistry students' competence throughout their BSc course in some problem-solving strategies
title_sort chemistry students' competence throughout their bsc course in some problem-solving strategies
description The main objective of the study was to test chemistry students' competence, in the first, second and final years of their BSc course, in some basic problem-solving strategies. Five strategies were tested: clarification and clear representation of problems; focusing sharply on the goal; identification and use of relevant principles; use of equations for calculations and deductions and use of a step-by-step procedure. The study method used was the analysis of students' solutions to questions that were carefully designed to test competence in problem-solving strategies. The study showed that performance was poor in all the problem-solving strategies tested and that there was no improvement in performance as students progressed from year to year. About a half of the students tested (average performance in all of the 11 questions used for testing) had difficulty in answering the questions. Possible reasons for students' difficulties are identified and suggestions are made for rectifying the difficulties. It is suggested that difficulties with the use of cognitive strategies are often not due to students' inability to understand and use them but to insufficient emphasis being placed on them in their courses. Since an increase in competence in cognitive strategies and cognitive skills canbe expected to lead to more efficient learning and problem-solving, not only in education courses but also throughout their lives, there is a need for training students in them until they become automatic and spontaneous mental operations. Such training should be integrated, throughout any course, with the teaching of content knowledge.
publisher The South African Chemical Institute
publishDate 2011
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0379-43502011000100006
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