Undergraduate instructional labs in physics generate intense opinions. Their advocates are passionate as to their importance for teaching physics as an experimental activity and providing “hands-on” learning experiences, while their detractors (often but not entirely students) offer harsh criticisms that they are pointless, confusing and unsatisfying, and “cookbook.” Here, both to help understand the reason for such discrepant views and to aid in the design of instructional lab courses, I compare the mental tasks or types of thinking (“cognitive task analysis”) associated with a physicist doing tabletop experimental research with the cognitive tasks of students in an introductory physics instructional lab involving traditional verification/confirmation exercises.
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September 2015
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September 01 2015
Comparative Cognitive Task Analyses of Experimental Science and Instructional Laboratory Courses
Carl Wieman
Carl Wieman
Stanford University
, Stanford, CA
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Phys. Teach. 53, 349–351 (2015)
Citation
Carl Wieman; Comparative Cognitive Task Analyses of Experimental Science and Instructional Laboratory Courses. Phys. Teach. 1 September 2015; 53 (6): 349–351. https://doi.org/10.1119/1.4928349
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