Modeling in Engineering: The Role of Representational Fluency in Students' Conceptual Understanding. Issue 1 (13th March 2013)
- Record Type:
- Journal Article
- Title:
- Modeling in Engineering: The Role of Representational Fluency in Students' Conceptual Understanding. Issue 1 (13th March 2013)
- Main Title:
- Modeling in Engineering: The Role of Representational Fluency in Students' Conceptual Understanding
- Authors:
- Moore, Tamara J.
Miller, Ronald L.
Lesh, Richard A.
Stohlmann, Micah S.
Kim, Young Rae
Johri, Aditya
Roth, Wolff‐Michael
Olds, Barbara M. - Abstract:
- <abstract abstract-type="main"> <title>Abstract</title> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0001" sec-type="section"> <title>Background</title> <p>Modeling abilities play an important role in engineering. The creation and use of representations is a central aspect of modeling, and students who are learning to model often use a variety of representations to express, test, revise, and communicate their own thinking. Consequently, model development often depends on representational fluency and the ability to translate between and within different representational forms.</p> </sec> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0002" sec-type="section"> <title>Purpose</title> <p>This study investigates the role that representations and representational fluency play in conceptual understanding during a complex modeling task related to heat transfer.</p> </sec> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0003" sec-type="section"> <title>Design/Method</title> <p>This study involved 16 teams of 3 or 4 college students in a first‐semester heat transfer course participating in a complex modeling task. The task of the student teams was to develop a model to predict the interface temperature and the sensation felt by human skin when touching a utensil made of a given material at a given temperature. Data sources included audio recordings of student teams, as well as student‐generated artifacts.</p> </sec> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0004" sec-type="section"> <title>Results</title> <p>The results show teams thinking about their model through multiple<abstract abstract-type="main"> <title>Abstract</title> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0001" sec-type="section"> <title>Background</title> <p>Modeling abilities play an important role in engineering. The creation and use of representations is a central aspect of modeling, and students who are learning to model often use a variety of representations to express, test, revise, and communicate their own thinking. Consequently, model development often depends on representational fluency and the ability to translate between and within different representational forms.</p> </sec> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0002" sec-type="section"> <title>Purpose</title> <p>This study investigates the role that representations and representational fluency play in conceptual understanding during a complex modeling task related to heat transfer.</p> </sec> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0003" sec-type="section"> <title>Design/Method</title> <p>This study involved 16 teams of 3 or 4 college students in a first‐semester heat transfer course participating in a complex modeling task. The task of the student teams was to develop a model to predict the interface temperature and the sensation felt by human skin when touching a utensil made of a given material at a given temperature. Data sources included audio recordings of student teams, as well as student‐generated artifacts.</p> </sec> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0004" sec-type="section"> <title>Results</title> <p>The results show teams thinking about their model through multiple representations and through translations within and among representations. Students' early ways of thinking used a variety of interacting representations but were often unstable and involved incomplete notions of the system to be modeled. Model development involved increasing representational fluency as well as parallel and interacting progress along a variety of dimensions.</p> </sec> <sec id="jee20004-sec-0005" sec-type="section"> <title>Conclusions</title> <p>This study furthers the understanding of representational fluency in undergraduate engineering students in a heat transfer setting and how representational fluency contributes to conceptual and application understanding.</p> </sec> </abstract> … (more)
- Is Part Of:
- Journal of engineering education. Volume 102:Issue 1(2013:Jan.)
- Journal:
- Journal of engineering education
- Issue:
- Volume 102:Issue 1(2013:Jan.)
- Issue Display:
- Volume 102, Issue 1 (2013)
- Year:
- 2013
- Volume:
- 102
- Issue:
- 1
- Issue Sort Value:
- 2013-0102-0001-0000
- Page Start:
- 141
- Page End:
- 178
- Publication Date:
- 2013-03-13
- Subjects:
- Engineering -- Study and teaching (Higher) -- Periodicals
620.00711 - Journal URLs:
- http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1002/(ISSN)2168-9830 ↗
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/ ↗
http://www.jee.org ↗ - DOI:
- 10.1002/jee.20004 ↗
- Languages:
- English
- ISSNs:
- 1069-4730
- Deposit Type:
- Legaldeposit
- View Content:
- Available online (eLD content is only available in our Reading Rooms) ↗
- Physical Locations:
- British Library DSC - 4979.000000
British Library DSC - BLDSS-3PM
British Library HMNTS - ELD Digital store - Ingest File:
- 3924.xml