Thursday, July 12, 2012

World Conference on Physics Education 2012- Physics as a Culture

12th July 2012

Ok....I am back in Singapore.  Have been back a week actually.....but was having jetlag and had piles of work to clear and I could not update this blog.  But I think it is essential, else as time passes, my memory will most likely undergo an exponential decay.  And I find that my half life of my short term memory has been getting shorter over the years as well.  Ok, so I will try and find 30 min to blog about some of the interesting insights or information that I got from the the conference.

Actually this is good, cause I will therefore only blog about the things that impacted me the most.
 

Crossing the Culture in Physics Education

This is the key theme of this year's conference about the role of context and culture in teaching physics.

Prof Edward F. Redish giving his plenary talk to start off the conference.

One glance at the theme, one would actually think that "cross culture" is between the Asians, Hispanics, and Caucasians etc.  Actually, I was surprised that there was another way to think about this cross-culture thingy....i.e. to think about it in terms of disciplines.

Hm, and come to think of it, it is quite true for me as a student.  Let me try to elaborate and summarise the gist of what I find interesting from Professor Redish's talk...and hopefully I don't get it wrong.

1.  Physicists, chemist, biologists and those who study math or literature when given a same problem could think of it differently and also interpret the ideas different.  Hence, they approach a question and solve it in their own unique manners. 

2.  What is therefore important for Physicists and which we seem to think are fundamental - like forces and energy.  May not be so fundamental for students who take biology and medicine,as they belong to another culture.  

Prof. Redish talked about teaching undergraduates not taking Physics as a major, hm...my mind was running through images of my students who are offering literature, history and who has not inkling why they chose to do physics at A-levels in the first place.  Ok....I still think forces and energy is fundamental, I cannot image why not.  I cannot see the value of literature except for enjoyment...(don't throw rotten eggs at me....I do read classics and literature....for fun....but have a fundamental respect for Physics), but I guess my lit. students could possible see no value in Physics for themselves.  I guess this helps me to understand them better and develop an empathy for them and not be so impatient with them.

3. It takes time for students to inculcate the habits for them to think like physicists.  It is not natural to them.  We must articulate our thoughts and constantly show them how we look at things.

3.  Physics is a culture, students are at the edge of this culture, observing and learning more about the culture.  We need to help them to slowly cross over the culture - hm it means starting from primary school I guess - and understand the culture before we can move them in.

4.  Many a times, we do not really understand Physics.  We think we understand Physics.  In reality, it is just that we are exposed to the same concepts many times at different angles and we start accepting the concepts and think we know them.

When I look at my son doing electricity at Primary school, I can better understand the problems he is getting now?  Electricity and many concepts in physics are actually quite abstract to the students, cause these can be seen.  We cannot see forces, we cannot see energy and we cannot see electrons.  We develop these as we go along and with sufficient exposure and experiments, we believe in them.
No wonder my son is having problem with forces and energy and treating them as equivalent and I am pulling my hair out trying to teach him.  

No wonder some students till now still mixes up concepts of forces and motion, as they "see" only the effect.

Hence, I guess we need to also to be tolerant of our students and give them time to explore the concepts till they are able to accept it.

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Further revelation:

Hence, for those of us who have immersed in physics long enough, when we see equations, we may be able to have mental physical models of what that equations are.  For students, they are at the stage of infancy when to them the equations are algebraic equations with no form or shape or significance.  They do not see mental models, they are often unaware of assumptions behind the equations.  This does not help if the tutorial practices in schools and the assessment questions are choked with plug-and -chug question cause they will only see that searching for the correct no. associated with the symbols and chugging into the magic equations will yield the answer and think that they "understand" their physics. 

Again, we therefore need to get students to interpret their calculations, have more conceptual and explanation questions if we want to develop their thinking in physics.

Ok....I am not saying there is no place in physics for drill questions.  If I look at my own learning and do a self-reflection.  I find that I always start with the plug and chug questions, cause I am gaining familiarity with the concept, then I look at the different ways they are applied and see how they work.  When I have build sufficient confidence, and can use the equations without having trouble even to remember its basic form, I then move on to look at it more conceptually and then applying them to more complex situations.  

Now looking back on our lecture tutorial systems, I feel that more should be done in the area of bridging between the lecture and tutorials.  The lectures often introduces the concepts, and and examples often are looking a plug and chug question.  Then we move on to some self-review question and discussion questions.  But our self-review questions are often not planned through with a clear learning path and purpose in mind.  The bridge between the self-review questions are often not clear as well.  In fact, sometimes the jump is very, very big.  We should try the lay stepping stones and step them from basic and build concepts on each other, before assimilating them with concepts from other areas.  I know that is going to be massive work.  And with us trying to limit the tutorials to about 10+ questions.  It will definitely be a challenge.

Footnote:

You must be thinking...why do I only update the blog now.  Network in Turkey is slow....very slow, and it does not help when the hotel you stay at has network that is intermittent and unreliable.



World Conference on Physics Education 2012 - 30 June 2012

We flew to to Istanbul on Emirates transiting at Dubai.  We were not told on the website when we booked the tickets that there was a stop at Colombo where we made a stop for an hour to drop off some passengers and pickup others.  In all the flight was okay, except that the seats were a little tight and I had this lady with his boy who kept putting things over to my seat and then putting the legs over to me as well.

Transiting at Dubai Airport
The transit at Dubai airport was a wait for approximately 4 hours.  Chiu Wai and I walked around to get a table to do some work, but there were only lounge chairs all around.  Cafes and restaurants were mainly quite packed and finally we had coffee (of course Chiu Wai will not have coffee, he had hot chocolate) at a cafe.  We chatted on work as we could not get any internet connections up though and had lunch later at Burger King.  We managed to locate the information counter to ask about wireless connection, but alas we were hungry by then and decided to eat instead.
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 Finally arrived at Istanbul Airport Atartuk at around 3 pm Istanbul time.  We waited for more than 30 minutes before we could collect luggage.  Managed to change some of my pounds leftover from the UK trip I went in 2009 to Turkish lira...though they gave me all in 100 notes.  Decided against changing all as the money changers in the airport will charge a commission of 4% and also it was difficult to change TL back to SGD in Singapore, so didn't want to incur additional charges again.

I bought a Turkcell SIM card so that I had data plan in Turkey, but it did cost me 85TL with only 30 TL value.
Later note:  By the time you activate it, Turkcell would have sent you a few SMS and you have only about 28TL left.  I could not activate the other prepaid broadband plans using the instructions from http://prepaid-wireless-internet-access.wetpaint.com/page/Turkey+Turkcell, and could not check my balance, in the end.  I just only surfed on 3G when necessary, keeping my fingers crossed that my money was available.

Figuring the way to the hotel was a nightmare, a few Taxi drivers could not know where our hotel was, it added to the frustration that our hotel was changed 2 days before the trip and after we have paid like 1 month ago!  A brave taxi driver finally claimed he knew were it was, though he was later all on the phone asking people where the hotel was.  And closer to the place, he had to ask a few more people walking on the road where it  was.  Arggh!  So obviously, it was not so obvious!  But finally we found one kind soul who knew it was.  It was in a quieter part near Taksim square down a very steep slope which is a chore to climb everyday.







Friday, June 29, 2012

My Trip to World Conference on Physics Education 2012@ Istanbul

 I am rushing now to prepare for the World Conference on Physics Education 2012 at Istanbul, arghh...have yet to pack and am rushing to pack now.  Having butterflies in my stomach and I have yet to go.

I will be presenting a paper for the conference on EM Preconceptions for Physics Students in my school. Was originally scheduled to present on the 3rd July, but now has been postponed to the 5th July (Thursday).  Guess what?  I am still rushing my school other work datelines - but okay, after I put this down, I will then go back and look at the data....and do up the slides.

But the program looks exciting, the program has so many concurrent sessions and the abstracts are so thick - over 400 pages.  I won't print them then.....will go the the venue to collect.  But I am so excited and I hope to learn something more there.

Anyway conference programmes are here, do take a look at them by following the link below.  Hm...there was suppose to be a teacher's programme to visit schools in Istanbul, I am interested in it as well....but it clashes with my presentation :<  But guess Chiu Wai, my colleague and Director,  can go for that and come back and share instead.

So sad that I can't take the Mac, I am so absent minded, I better keep things to the minimum....my laptop lasts only 2.5 hours.....haiz.  Good thing is....I don't have to work on the plane then.


http://www.wcpe2012.org/WCPE_program.pdf
http://www.wcpe2012.org/WCPE_Book_of_abstracts.pdf 

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Friday, March 2, 2012

Making Thinking Visible: Lecture Quizzes

 My school runs a lecture tutorial system for our Physics Cohort.  (We have about 400 to 500 students ....alas....we used to have 800+.....before they stop making Physics a prerequisite for Engineering in Singapore Universities....but that is another story.)

To let the students pay more attention and consolidate their learning after each topic, we would often give them a lecture tests, not based on complex calculations, rather to assess their basic understanding of the topics.

The lecture quizzes are traditionally about 5 - 10 multiple choice questions requiring the students to finish in 10 - 15 minutes before the start of the next topic's lecture.  The lag is give the students time to read up and consolidate (and actually before the tutorials to make life easier for tutors).  They are questions that also require very little calculations.

Results of lecture quizzes will be given to individual tutors teaching the tutorial classes and the tutors will then run through the problematic areas in class.  Tutors traditionally run through the answers before start of the tutorial to just warm up the students and do a quick summary of concepts.

This year, I decided to try something different. 

1.  I did the tutorial questions with my classes first and  used the results of the lecture quizzes only at the end of the whole set of tutorial questions (related to the topic)

2.  I captured the responses of all the quiz questions and the final grade separately and did not put them into the original scripts to be returned.

3.  At the last tutorial for the topic, I returned the lecture quizzes (with no ticks or crosses) or grades.  Then I gave them 5 min to look through their responses again and pen in their new answers on a separate answer sheet.  At this time they are not suppose to discuss with their friends.

4.  Then I gave them 2 min to discuss with their friends where their area of difficult was and write down the new responses again.  Finally, think of questions they would like to ask and pen it down.  I then collected back the new responses.

5.  The questions were shared in class and discussed together with the answers as a wrapping up activity.


After conducting it for a few sessions, I think I will continue to use it in my classroom, cause:

1.  I like the reflective component the activity have.

2.  It did surprised me that there were still concepts the students could not internalise even after going through the tutorials.  E.g. for the case of E-field.  I realised that Potential concepts were still weak and an area of difficulty even after we have gone through and discussed them.  (Remember, I collected the new responses?)

3.  Students through the activity was more aware of where their key areas lie and of course they can allow them to focus more in that particular area.

4.   The activity is also more engaging and promotes active learning, not knowing how well they have done, let's them think more about their answers. 

5.  Sharing with their friends, let them learn insights from their friends.

6.  After one or two times, I also find that they start telling me that they realise that getting the concepts is very important, not just focusing on the calculations.  Apparently, they thought that if you focused on the calculations in tutorials, the concepts will be internalised naturally.  Some reflected that they realised that they need to be aware and be clear on what concepts they are applying or why they are applying it else they could be easily confused by themselves. -  This is a leap which I feel was great for me.

7.  The questions being easy and not too complex (in terms of fact that they do not require multiple steps need in calculations) concentrating on simply assessing understand focused key concepts also allow tutors to clearly identify problem areas even after tutorial.  Students were truly truly surprised that they could not answer what deceptively looked like straight forward questions that assessed only understanding.  (Actually they are the trickest....cause you often cannot plug and chug numbers cause there aren't any.)

8.  Options were carefully designed to identify preconceptions and common misconceptions and hence through the wrong answers, you can tell where should be the area of focus when you revise the topic again or teach this topic again.



Saturday, January 7, 2012

2 Swf to Movie Converter Reviewed

As part of the home-based learning project, I was asked to convert some swf files to movie files so that we could use it for our learning resource.

In my search on Google, I found two particular ones which some people may use.
  • The first is called SWF to AVI
  • The second is called SWF to AVI MPEG Converter
I installed both on my computer and tried them.  Since I have used both of them, I thought I could quickly review them.

SWF to AVI 
(At http://swftoavi.com)

Pros:
  • Generally, the software was easy to download, very easy to install.
  • It was relatively straightforward to use.
  • The swf I had was interactive, so I managed to capture the clicks the moved on ahead.
  • Download site was relatively clear and give some instructions on possible problems for sound capture and solution.
Cons:  
  • It could only output in AVI format.
  • I was also visibly disappointed in the poor resolution file it generated.
  • I read through the sound problem, could not follow through as I could not find the "Wave Mix On" thingy it was describing even after I right clicked.  So when I recorded, it seemed to be simply recording what it could of the internal built in microphone.  And as there is a construction near my place.  I do find it frustrating to hear the background construction noise being recorded as well.  But I guess it would be good when you want to record your own voice over the movie file. On hind sight, it could be a configuration problem as I am using a tablet which has a built-in microphone as it has speech to text recognition enabled.
Conclusion:  This could not really served the purpose I wanted as it meant me running through the swf files (since I wanted to capture the clicks) in a sound proof room and it meant me only doing the work in a sound proof room in school, so I abandoned it in the end.



SWF to AVI MPEG Converter (Highly Recommended)
(http:// www.lumixsoft.com)



Features:
  1.  Supports export to AVI, MPEG, MP4 and many other formats.
  2. As with above, it supports action scripts, movie clips and sound.  What I really like is it really captures the narration of my clips but not from the output speaker, cause the sound was clean.  For action script, you have an option of clicking, typing the interactive parts of the swf and capture the actions or alternative set to the auto mode which you can set the swf file to advance after the side time if there is no action.
  3. You can customise the output format (stated above), the parameters (e.g. the frame rate, the size of final video screen.) It does give advice e.g. the screen size, the output platform like ipod, apple TV, DVD that the final file is intended for.  Or it can be set entirely automatic.
  4. The quality of the movie is much better than the above.
  5. Yes, for ease of use, it is easy to fiddle around, took me about 5 min to figure out how to work through the files.
Tip:  The pause button does not pause the capture, but rather the screen, it was good for me as mine was a Q & A type of swf and so I could control the pause for students to think and then reveal the answer in good time and pausing a longer for the answer if I think my students will need time to digest.

Cons:  Not any serious one I can think of for the moment.  But yes, there are more settings to make than the top, so you need to play around with all the settings for about less than 5 minutes, capture a few trials before you are good to go.  Free, bit a logo shows up at the top hand corner of software.  But does not really bother me.  You can pay and register to get it removed for the export.

Conclusion:  This is the one I am using, and it is definitely a keeper in time to come.















Thursday, January 5, 2012

Lesson Activity in Moodle

I have just been arrowed a task that was not assigned to me end of last year - to design and build an elesson on the topic of "electricity" for our school's home-based learning.

Hm...so what is home based learning.  It is an initiative that is started by Ministry of Education (Singapore) in response to an incident many years back.  In 2003, because of the SARs outbreak, the schools where given sudden notice to close for two weeks.  These left the schools in flurry and especially the JCs, as lost in two weeks of precious curriculum had a great impact as the students were expected to sit for the A-levels in two years time.  The A-levels was deemed as an important milestone as it meant entrance to university of choice and the subsequent career path that the child would take.  So the schools set up contingency plans to get lessons, worksheets and notes delivered to students without face contact.

The schools in Singapore had been on e-learning bandwagon for some years, but it never really took off as students and teacher still feel it is the face-to-face interaction that is important.  Questions and lessons can be modified on the spot based on students' problems and understanding, unlike in the case of elessons, which tend to take a fixed path, and it afterall difficult, even for the most experienced teacher to anticipate every question the children are going to ask.

Anyway,  I have a dateline to meet, was just assigned the task yesterday and I have to get the lesson up by last week of January and first week of Feb, so I am as well get to it.

Resources for Learning to Build Moodle Lessons:

I have been using Moodle for the last two years and there is one feature that I would very much like to explore.  However, as it does take more than a few minutes to learn, so I have never got to learning it.  I guess it always boils down to this, there are so many things that we need to do, so we will only go about doing it or learning it when there is a need to.  (And that students will only learn things if they find it useful and when they need it.  It is the same with upgrading and teaching the skills to teachers,  JIT (just in time) teaching are the best.  At least, this is what I found that works for staff development in my department. Sharing are just for exposure to ideas and gives you an inkling who to approach. )


So first things first is to look at the possible resources on the Web that allows me to learn Moodle Lesson.  Below are some of the ones I really like:


 1.  "More Moodle - Lessons" by La Trobe University. (Last Accessed: 5th Jan 2012)
http://www.latrobe.edu.au/lms/assets/downloads/moodle/guides/user-guide-lessons_v1.0.pdf

I really like this one, as it explains clearly every step and what every setting the term means though I had a little problem following through as my school is currently using Moodle 1.9 and this version of guide is for Moodle 2.0.  We are upgrading to Moodle 2.1 in March....but that would be too late for me.

Behind this document also states some useful references for learning lessons.  I particularly like the videos listed. So I am also linking it here.

2.  YouTube Videos on "Creating a Lesson in Moodle" by LMikowychok

Ah....the wonder of Youtube.  You can now find so many video guides to doing so many things and so it is really no wonder.  These are a series of 3 videos which will guide you to create lesson in Moodle.  It is also good to view it through first to have a rough inkling and overview of what you can do.



Happy Moodling!









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