RESEARCH PAPER
Incline Height and Object Weight: Examining the Fluidity of Children’s Commonsense Theories of Motion
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School of Management and Social Science, St Mary’s University, Twickenham, UK
Online publication date: 2018-01-21
Publication date: 2018-01-21
EURASIA J. Math., Sci Tech. Ed 2018;14(4):1407-1413
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ABSTRACT
144 children aged 5 to 12 years made initial predictions about the speeds of a heavy and a light ball rolling down a slope. They were then asked to consider how changing the incline height would impact the initial predictions. The findings illustrate a shift from rigid differentiation to more flexible knowledge structures. While perceptions changed with increasing age from light-as-faster to heavy-as-faster, younger children were also less likely to believe that any other incline steepness could conceivably lead to a different outcome. Older children, on the other hand, showed a heightened awareness of how changing incline heights could allow for alternative motion patterns. The study adds to current understanding of conceptual development. It expands on the debate between knowledge-in-pieces and knowledge-as-theory, concluding within its constrained scope that development of scientific knowledge about object motion possibly occurs in a transition from pieces to theory. Consequentially, the paper also considers implications for early science education.
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