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Diagnosis of Categories of Alternative Conceptions in Electricity and Magnetism: the case of Ethiopian Undergraduate Students.

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dc.contributor.author Dega, BG
dc.contributor.author Kriek, Jeanne
dc.contributor.author Mogese, TF
dc.date.accessioned 2014-05-22T08:44:30Z
dc.date.available 2014-05-22T08:44:30Z
dc.date.issued 2013
dc.identifier.citation 5. Dega, BG, Kriek J & Mogese, TF (2013) Diagnosis of Categories of Alternative Conceptions in Electricity and Magnetism: the case of Ethiopian Undergraduate Students. Research in Science Education 43(5) pp 1891-1915 en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/13485
dc.description.abstract The purpose of this study was to categorize 35 Ethiopian undergraduate physics students’ alternative conceptions in the concepts of electric potential and energy. A descriptive qualitative research design was used to categorize the students’ alternative conceptions. Four independently homogeneous ability focus groups were formed to elicit the students’ conceptual perceptions. A five stage thematic (categorical) framework analysis – familiarization, identifying a thematic framework, coding, charting and interpretation – was made to analyze data of the focus group discussions. The categories of alternative conceptions were based on the students’ epistemological and ontological descriptions of the concepts investigated. Consequently, the following categories were diagnosed: naive physics, lateral alternative conceptions, ontological alternative conceptions, Ohm’s p-primes, mixed conceptions and loose ideas. The extensiveness of the alternative conceptions from the epistemological and ontological perspectives was comparable and considerable. The naïve physics and lateral alternative conceptions were more extensive than the others. The alternative conceptions were less frequently and inconsistently revealed within and across the categories. In general, it was concluded that the categories have common characteristics of diversified distribution of alternative conceptions and multiple alternative conceptions of specific concepts within and across the categories. Finally, instructional and theoretical implications are forwarded. en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject Alternative conceptions en
dc.subject Categories of alternative conceptions en
dc.subject conceptural change en
dc.subject Electricity and Magnetism en
dc.title Diagnosis of Categories of Alternative Conceptions in Electricity and Magnetism: the case of Ethiopian Undergraduate Students. en
dc.type Article en


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