Does transitioning to online classes mid-semester affect conceptual understanding?
Abstract
The Force Concept Inventory (FCI) can be used as an assessment tool to measure conceptual gains in a cohort of students. The FCI uses a conceptions/"misconceptions" lens rather than a context dependent perspective, such as "knowledge-in-pieces". In this study it was given to first year students ( students) pre- and post-mechanics lectures, at the University of Johannesburg. From these results we examine the effect of switching mid-semester from traditional classes to online classes, as imposed by the COVID-19 lockdown in South Africa. Overall results indicate no appreciable difference of gain, when bench-marked against previous studies using this assessment tool. When compared with grades, the semester grades do not appear to be greatly affected. Furthermore, statistical analyses also indicate a gender difference in mean gains in favour of females at the significance level (for paired data, ).
Cite
@article{arxiv.2101.09908,
title = {Does transitioning to online classes mid-semester affect conceptual understanding?},
author = {Emanuela Carleschi and Anna Chrysostomou and Alan S. Cornell and Wade Naylor},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2101.09908},
year = {2022}
}
Comments
17 pages, 6 figures, and 3 tables. To appear in the European Journal of Physics under the title, "Probing the effect on student conceptual understanding due to a forced mid-semester transition to online teaching"