Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools

Students entering university to study chemistry have difficulty understanding the concepts involved when attention is focused at the particulate level of matter. No-one can actually see what happens to individual molecules or atoms during any process of change and most means of explanation at the visible, or macro level are inadequate when describing behaviour at the particulate, or micro level. Structured worksheets and coloured Lego® building blocks were employed in order to facilitate understanding of the physical changes that water undergoes during changes of temperature. A sample size of 154 Foundation Programme students was used and the responses of these students investigated. A constructivist approach, enabling students to apply concrete reasoning in building their own knowledge, was evaluated. Students worked with interlocking building blocks to improve their understanding of molecular structure and behaviour. The students' academic performance improved when using these more concrete tools. This demonstrates that teaching is more effective when allowing visual and tactile senses to interact. It is therefore the purpose of this paper to substantiate the use of concrete tools, such as Lego® blocks, to help explain difficult concepts in chemistry, such as the behaviour of atoms and molecules.

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Main Author: Marais,A.F.(Fiona)
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=S0379-43502011000100022
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spelling oai:scielo:S0379-435020110001000222015-07-16Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching toolsMarais,A.F.(Fiona) Chemical bonds Lego® building blocks concrete reasoning first-year chemistry students Students entering university to study chemistry have difficulty understanding the concepts involved when attention is focused at the particulate level of matter. No-one can actually see what happens to individual molecules or atoms during any process of change and most means of explanation at the visible, or macro level are inadequate when describing behaviour at the particulate, or micro level. Structured worksheets and coloured Lego® building blocks were employed in order to facilitate understanding of the physical changes that water undergoes during changes of temperature. A sample size of 154 Foundation Programme students was used and the responses of these students investigated. A constructivist approach, enabling students to apply concrete reasoning in building their own knowledge, was evaluated. Students worked with interlocking building blocks to improve their understanding of molecular structure and behaviour. The students' academic performance improved when using these more concrete tools. This demonstrates that teaching is more effective when allowing visual and tactile senses to interact. It is therefore the purpose of this paper to substantiate the use of concrete tools, such as Lego® blocks, to help explain difficult concepts in chemistry, such as the behaviour of atoms and molecules.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=S0379-43502011000100022en
institution SCIELO
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country Sudáfrica
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component Revista
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databasecode rev-scielo-za
tag revista
region África del Sur
libraryname SciELO
language English
format Digital
author Marais,A.F.(Fiona)
spellingShingle Marais,A.F.(Fiona)
Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools
author_facet Marais,A.F.(Fiona)
author_sort Marais,A.F.(Fiona)
title Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools
title_short Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools
title_full Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools
title_fullStr Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools
title_full_unstemmed Overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools
title_sort overcoming conceptual difficulties in first-year chemistry students by applying concrete teaching tools
description Students entering university to study chemistry have difficulty understanding the concepts involved when attention is focused at the particulate level of matter. No-one can actually see what happens to individual molecules or atoms during any process of change and most means of explanation at the visible, or macro level are inadequate when describing behaviour at the particulate, or micro level. Structured worksheets and coloured Lego® building blocks were employed in order to facilitate understanding of the physical changes that water undergoes during changes of temperature. A sample size of 154 Foundation Programme students was used and the responses of these students investigated. A constructivist approach, enabling students to apply concrete reasoning in building their own knowledge, was evaluated. Students worked with interlocking building blocks to improve their understanding of molecular structure and behaviour. The students' academic performance improved when using these more concrete tools. This demonstrates that teaching is more effective when allowing visual and tactile senses to interact. It is therefore the purpose of this paper to substantiate the use of concrete tools, such as Lego® blocks, to help explain difficult concepts in chemistry, such as the behaviour of atoms and molecules.
publisher The South African Chemical Institute
publishDate 2011
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0379-43502011000100022
work_keys_str_mv AT maraisaffiona overcomingconceptualdifficultiesinfirstyearchemistrystudentsbyapplyingconcreteteachingtools
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