2012
DOI: 10.1103/physrevstper.8.020114
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Representing energy. I. Representing a substance ontology for energy

Abstract: The nature of energy is not typically an explicit topic of physics instruction. Nonetheless, verbal and graphical representations of energy articulate models in which energy is conceptualized as a quasimaterial substance, a stimulus, or a vertical location. We argue that a substance ontology for energy is particularly productive in developing understanding of energy transfers and transformations. We analyze classic representations of energy-bar charts, pie charts, and others-to determine the energy ontologies … Show more

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Cited by 86 publications
(119 citation statements)
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References 39 publications
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“…Recently, there has been an increasing interest in how science education may take advantage of conceptual metaphor (e.g. Amin, 2009;Amin, Jeppsson, Haglund, & Strömdahl, 2012;Brookes & Etkina, 2007;Jeppsson, Haglund, Amin, & Strömdahl, 2013;Niebert, Marsch, & Treagust, 2012;Scherr, Close, McKagan, & Vokos, 2012) and conceptual blending (Podolefsky & Finkelstein, 2007).…”
Section: Another Important Practical Question Is At What Stage Of Teamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Recently, there has been an increasing interest in how science education may take advantage of conceptual metaphor (e.g. Amin, 2009;Amin, Jeppsson, Haglund, & Strömdahl, 2012;Brookes & Etkina, 2007;Jeppsson, Haglund, Amin, & Strömdahl, 2013;Niebert, Marsch, & Treagust, 2012;Scherr, Close, McKagan, & Vokos, 2012) and conceptual blending (Podolefsky & Finkelstein, 2007).…”
Section: Another Important Practical Question Is At What Stage Of Teamentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Energy Theater represents energy as being conserved, emplaced, and changing form; it explicitly shows energy as being located in objects [24], flowing among objects, and accumulating in objects; and it is a dynamic representation, able to show processes as they unfold as well as ''snapshots'' of energy at specific instants. These are the features of an energy model that promote detailed tracking of energy transfers and transformations in complex realworld processes [3,4]. Learners work together to negotiate this representation of the energy dynamics in a particular scenario with an end goal of enacting the representation in a final performance for their peers.…”
Section: Energy Theatermentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These features constitute a powerful conceptual model of energy that may be used to explain and predict energy phenomena [17][18][19][20][21][22]. Though this metaphor has limitations [18,23], its benefits for our specific instructional goals outweigh its possible disadvantages [3].…”
Section: Energy Theatermentioning
confidence: 99%
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