Journal Article Detail Page

American Journal of Physics
written by Wendy K. Adams and Carl E. Wieman
We have empirically identified over 40 distinct sub-skills that affect a person's ability to solve complex problems in many different contexts. The identification of so many sub-skills explains why it has been so difficult to teach or assess problem solving as a single skill. The existence of these sub-skills is supported by several studies comparing a wide range of individuals' strengths and weaknesses in these sub-skills, their "problem solving fingerprint," while solving different types of problems including a classical mechanics problem, quantum mechanics problems, and a complex trip-planning problem with no physics. We see clear differences in the problem solving fingerprint of physics and engineering majors compared to the elementary education majors that we tested. The implications of these findings for guiding the teaching and assessing of problem solving in physics instruction are discussed.
American Journal of Physics: Volume 83, Issue 5
Subjects Levels Resource Types
Education Foundations
- Problem Solving
- Sample Population
- Student Characteristics
= Skills
- Lower Undergraduate
- Upper Undergraduate
- Reference Material
= Article
= Research study
Intended Users Formats Ratings
- Educators
- Researchers
- application/pdf
- text/html
  • Currently 0.0/5

Want to rate this material?
Login here!


Access Rights:
Available by subscription and
Available for purchase
Restriction:
© 2015 American Association of Physics Teachers
DOI:
10.1119/1.4913923
Record Creator:
Metadata instance created March 29, 2019 by Bruce Mason
Record Updated:
June 6, 2019 by Bruce Mason
Last Update
when Cataloged:
April 21, 2015
Other Collections:

Save to my folders

Contribute

Similar Materials