Skip to main content

Publications

Toolboxes and handing students a hammer: The effects of cueing and instruction on getting students to think critically

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N.G. Holmes
D. Kumar
D.A. Bonn
Abstract

Developing critical thinking skills is a common goal of an undergraduate physics curriculum. How do students make sense of evidence and what do they do with it? In this study, we evaluated students' critical thinking behaviors through their written notebooks in an introductory physics laboratory course. We compared student behaviors in the Structured Quantitative Inquiry Labs (SQILabs) curriculum to a control group and evaluated the fragility of these behaviors through procedural cueing.

Journal
Physical Review Physics Education Research
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Gender gaps and gendered action in a first-year physics laboratory

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
J. Day
J.B. Stang
N.G. Holmes
D. Kumar
D.A. Bonn
Abstract

It is established that male students outperform female students on almost all commonly used physics concept inventories. However, there is significant variation in the factors that contribute to the gap, as well as the direction in which they influence it. It is presently unknown if such a gender gap exists on the relatively new Concise Data Processing Assessment (CDPA) and, therefore, whether gendered actions in the teaching lab might influence - or be influenced by - the gender gap.

Journal
Physical Review Physics Education Research
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Examining and contrasting the cognitive activities engaged in undergraduate research experiences and lab courses

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N.G. Holmes
C.E. Wieman
Abstract

While the positive outcomes of undergraduate research experiences (UREs) have been extensively categorized, the mechanisms for those outcomes are less understood. Through lightly structured focus group interviews, we have extracted the cognitive tasks that students identify as engaging in during their UREs. We also use their many comparative statements about their coursework, especially lab courses, to evaluate their experimental physics-related cognitive tasks in those environments.

Journal
Physical Review Physics Education Research
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Measuring the impact of an instructional laboratory on the learning of introductory physics

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
C. Wieman
N.G. Holmes
Abstract

We have analyzed the impact of taking an associated lab course on the final exam scores in two large introductory physics courses. Performance between students who did and did not take the lab course was compared using final exam questions from the associated courses that related to concepts from the lab courses. The population of students who took the lab in each case was somewhat different from those who did not enroll in the lab course in terms of background and major.

Journal
American Journal of Physics
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Teaching critical thinking

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N.G. Holmes
C.E. Wieman
D.A. Bonn
Abstract

The ability to make decisions based on data, with its inherent uncertainties and variability, is a complex and vital skill in the modern world. The need for such quantitative critical thinking occurs in many different contexts, and although it is an important goal of education, that goal is seldom being achieved. We argue that the key element for developing this ability is repeated practice in making decisions based on data, with feedback on those decisions.

Journal
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Quantitative comparisons to promote inquiry in the introductory physics lab

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N.G. Holmes
D.A. Bonn
Abstract

In a recent report, the American Association of Physics Teachers has developed an updated set of recommendations for curriculum of undergraduate physics labs. This document focuses on six major themes: constructing knowledge, modeling, designing experiments, developing technical and practical laboratory skills, analyzing and visualizing data, and communicating physics. These themes all tie together as a set of practical skills in scientific measurement, analysis, and experimentation.

Journal
Physics Teacher
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Making the failure more productive: scaffolding the invention process to improve inquiry behaviors and outcomes in invention activities

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N.G. Holmes
J. Day
A.H.K. Park
D.A. Bonn
I. Roll
Abstract

Invention activities are Productive Failure activities in which students attempt (and often fail) to invent methods that capture deep properties of a construct before being taught expert solutions. The current study evaluates the effect of scaffolding on the invention processes and outcomes, given that students are not expected to succeed in their inquiry and that all students receive subsequent instruction.

Journal
Instructional Science
Date Published
Funding Source
-0836012
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Process and outcome benefits for orienting students to analyze and reflect on available data in productive failure activities

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
I. Roll
N.G. Holmes
J. Day
A.H.K. Park
D.A. Bonn
Abstract

Invention activities are Productive Failure activities in which students at- tempt to invent methods that capture deep properties of given data before being taught expert solutions. The current study evaluates the effect of scaffolding on the invention processes and outcomes, given that students are not expected to succeed in their inquiry and that all students receive subsequent instruction. Two Invention activities related to data analysis concepts were given to 130 undergraduate students in a first-year physics lab course using an interactive learning environment.

Conference Name
.
Date Published
Funding Source
#SBE-0836012
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Teaching assistant professional development by and for TAs

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
N.G. Holmes
M.S. Martinuk
J. Ives
M. Warren
Abstract

In most large universities, much of the undergraduate teaching responsibility falls on graduate student teaching assistants (TAs), who are by then experienced students, but relatively inexperienced instructors. Institutions have a responsibility to offer quality instruction to undergraduate students and thus are responsible for preparing the TAs to teach.

Journal
Physics Teacher
Date Published
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group

Evaluating metacognitive scaffolding in Guided Invention Activities

Cornell Affiliated Author(s)
Author
I. Roll
N.G. Holmes
J. Day
D. Bonn
Abstract

Invention and Productive Failure activities ask students to generate methods that capture the important properties of some given data (e. g., uncertainty) before being taught the expert solution. Invention and Productive Failure activities are a class of scientific inquiry activities in that students create, implement, and evaluate mathematical models based on data. Yet, lacking sufficient inquiry skills, students often do not actualize the full potential of these activities.

Journal
Instructional Science
Date Published
Funding Source
-0836012
Group (Lab)
Natasha Holmes Group