Research Article

UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ UNDERSTANDING OF DENSITY AND CONCENTRATION: A CROSS-LEVEL INVESTIGATION

Volume: 4 September 1, 2016
EN

UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ UNDERSTANDING OF DENSITY AND CONCENTRATION: A CROSS-LEVEL INVESTIGATION

Abstract

In this study, it was aimed to explore all level university chemistry students, from freshmen to the students who graduated from the university chemistry departments, how students define the concepts of density, concentration, and solvation which are the fundamental and basic concepts of chemistry. Qualitative data were gathered in a test composed of 3 open-ended questions distributed to 135 university students comprising two different academic institutions: Education faculty and science and art faculty. Students were asked to provide a written description of three concepts. The data were analyzed by using both content analysis method and a concept-evaluation scheme. It was found that students had different understanding levels concerning three concepts and problems to the description of them. To add, students had the problem concerning the concept of mass which is a pre-requisite concept for density. The reason for the students’ difficulties with density and concentration can be related to nature of these concepts that involve proportional reasoning.

 

Keywords

References

  1. Abraham, M.R., Williamson, V.M., & Westbrook, S.L. (1994). A cross-aged study of the understanding of five chemistry concepts. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 31, 147165. Gay, L. R. & Airasion, P. (2000). Educational research: Competencies for analysis and application. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall. Hashweh, M.Z. (2016). The complexity of teaching density in middle school. Research in Science & Technological Education, 34 (1), 1-24. Haidar, A. H. (1997). Prospective chemistry teachers’ conceptions of the conservation matter and related concepts. Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 34, 181-197. Kohn, A. S., & Landau, B. (1987). Does the Concept of Density Develop? Judgments of Sinking and Floating. Annual symposium of the Jean Piaget Society, Philadelphia, PA. Nakiboğlu, C. (2003). Instructional misconceptions of Turkish prospective chemistry teachers about atomic orbitals and hybridization. Chemistry Education: Research and Practice, 4 (2), 171-188. Smith, C., S. Carey, and M. Wiser. 1985. “On Differentiation: A Case Study of the Development of the Concepts of Size, Weight, and Density.” Cognition 21 (3): 177–237. Yeend, R., Loverude, M. E., & Gonzales, B. (2001). Student Understanding of Density: A Cross-age Investigation. Physics Education Research Conference, in Rochester, NY.

Details

Primary Language

English

Subjects

-

Journal Section

Research Article

Authors

Nuri Nakiboğlu This is me

Publication Date

September 1, 2016

Submission Date

August 11, 2017

Acceptance Date

-

Published in Issue

Year 2016 Volume: 4

APA
Nakiboğlu, N., & Nakiboğlu, C. (2016). UNIVERSITY STUDENTS’ UNDERSTANDING OF DENSITY AND CONCENTRATION: A CROSS-LEVEL INVESTIGATION. The Eurasia Proceedings of Educational and Social Sciences, 4, 550-553. https://izlik.org/JA75EM83EC