2016
DOI: 10.5617/nordina.907
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Research on teaching and learning in Physics and Chemistry in NorDiNa Papers

Abstract: This article provides an overview of teaching and learning processes in research on physics and chemistry education published in NorDiNa 2005–2013. Using the didactic triangle as our theoretical framework we developed a typology to analyse the data and used this to categorise 89 related research papers, from all levels of education (primary, secondary and tertiary). The results suggest that students’ characteristics, their understanding of the content and learning outcomes are studied frequently. In contrast, … Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…Much less studied aspects were the teacher characteristics, what happens in the classroom while students are studying, how the teachers perceive the students' actions, attitudes and understanding, the students' feedback to the teacher, and teachers' self-reflection. These findings are in line with our previous findings in computing education research [10], science education research [14], and engineering education research [37]. This leads us to wonder why some aspects are studied more than the others in our data pool (ESERA, NorDiNa).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
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“…Much less studied aspects were the teacher characteristics, what happens in the classroom while students are studying, how the teachers perceive the students' actions, attitudes and understanding, the students' feedback to the teacher, and teachers' self-reflection. These findings are in line with our previous findings in computing education research [10], science education research [14], and engineering education research [37]. This leads us to wonder why some aspects are studied more than the others in our data pool (ESERA, NorDiNa).…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…The triangle presents the relationships between the three main actors in the instructional process: the content to be learned, the student and the teacher. The didactic triangle was further developed by Kinnunen [23] and Kinnunen and others [14] to consider the teacher's impact on the student-content relationship, the teacher's self-reflection and the student's feedback (shown as arrows 7 and 8 in Figure 1). In addition, as a part of further development, the didactic triangle was placed in a wider educational scope, so that it enabled the researchers to discuss the instructional processes at the institution, society and international.…”
Section: Analysis Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
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