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A fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory

The beginning of the universe, the Big Bang, being an important subdomain in cosmology, marks the very beginning of space and time. Therefore, it has formed the modern scientific worldview. Transferring this to students through science teaching is a frequent request in science literacy discussion (e...

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Autores principales: Aretz, Sarah, Borowski, Andreas, Schmeling, Sascha
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pisc.2016.08.003
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2824692
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author Aretz, Sarah
Borowski, Andreas
Schmeling, Sascha
author_facet Aretz, Sarah
Borowski, Andreas
Schmeling, Sascha
author_sort Aretz, Sarah
collection CERN
description The beginning of the universe, the Big Bang, being an important subdomain in cosmology, marks the very beginning of space and time. Therefore, it has formed the modern scientific worldview. Transferring this to students through science teaching is a frequent request in science literacy discussion (e.g., American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1993, Schecker et al., 2004). However, it is not yet clear in science education if students’ conceptions about the Big Bang vary by nationality, and therefore, if it is possible to apply the same teaching modules to students from different countries, who may have diverse social and cultural backgrounds and different curricula. These conceptions with which students enter the classroom were investigated in our study. We implemented an open-ended questionnaire survey in Germany, with questions based on recent U.S. studies. The results clearly showed, with high interrater reliabilities, widespread misconceptions like the Big Bang being an explosion of preexisting matter into empty space or the universe having a centre. Furthermore, a comparison of results from researchers in the USA, Sweden and Germany allowed us to identify differences in students’ conceptions between the countries. Our findings appear to indicate that German students have slightly better pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory.
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spelling cern-28246922022-08-16T19:42:11Zdoi:10.1016/j.pisc.2016.08.003http://cds.cern.ch/record/2824692Aretz, SarahBorowski, AndreasSchmeling, SaschaA fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theoryEducation and OutreachThe beginning of the universe, the Big Bang, being an important subdomain in cosmology, marks the very beginning of space and time. Therefore, it has formed the modern scientific worldview. Transferring this to students through science teaching is a frequent request in science literacy discussion (e.g., American Association for the Advancement of Science, 1993, Schecker et al., 2004). However, it is not yet clear in science education if students’ conceptions about the Big Bang vary by nationality, and therefore, if it is possible to apply the same teaching modules to students from different countries, who may have diverse social and cultural backgrounds and different curricula. These conceptions with which students enter the classroom were investigated in our study. We implemented an open-ended questionnaire survey in Germany, with questions based on recent U.S. studies. The results clearly showed, with high interrater reliabilities, widespread misconceptions like the Big Bang being an explosion of preexisting matter into empty space or the universe having a centre. Furthermore, a comparison of results from researchers in the USA, Sweden and Germany allowed us to identify differences in students’ conceptions between the countries. Our findings appear to indicate that German students have slightly better pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory.oai:cds.cern.ch:28246922016
spellingShingle Education and Outreach
Aretz, Sarah
Borowski, Andreas
Schmeling, Sascha
A fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory
title A fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory
title_full A fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory
title_fullStr A fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory
title_full_unstemmed A fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory
title_short A fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: Students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the Big Bang theory
title_sort fairytale creation or the beginning of everything: students’ pre-instructional conceptions about the big bang theory
topic Education and Outreach
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.pisc.2016.08.003
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2824692
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