Impact of Experiments on 13-year-old
Pupils’ Understanding of Selected
Science Concepts
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University of Ljubljana, SLOVENIA
Publication date: 2012-01-12
EURASIA J. Math., Sci Tech. Ed 2012;8(3):207-218
KEYWORDS
ABSTRACT
The purpose of this study was to establish what impact experimental work has on the
understanding of scientific concepts, what pupils remember about the experiments they
carried out and how they are able to formulate and understand the experiment plan. A
sample of 386 pupils aged 13+ participated in the research, of which 162 in the
experimental group conducted 5 experimental science activities. Instruments used with all
pupils in this study include: pre-test, knowledge test, delayed knowledge test and
questionnaire, while 39 of the pupils also took part in semi-structured interviews. The
results show that 35.8 % of pupils in the experimental group failed to write down at least
one experiment they remembered from science classes, and none of remaining 64.2 % of
pupils that wrote down at least one experiment correctly described it. In addition, the
results of the interviews show that only 2 pupils remembered the experiments from 5
experimental science activities three months after the experimenting without interviewer’s
help, and only 5 pupils were able to adequately name and describe those experiments and
interpret the experiments’ findings. Although they were unable to describe the
experiments, the students in the experimental group scored higher on the test and the
delayed test than the pupils in the control group with a statistically significant difference.
The results of the survey also show that pupils believe experiments to be the most popular
part of science classes.