2008
DOI: 10.1080/09500690701308458
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Upper Secondary French Students, Chemical Transformations and the “Register of Models”: A cross‐sectional study

Abstract: UPPER SECONDARY FRENCH STUDENTS, CHEMICAL TRANSFORMATIONS AND THE REGISTER OF MODELS: A CROSS-SECTIONAL STUDY AbstractThe purpose of this study is to identify how upper secondary school French students (grade 10 to 12) interpret chemical transformation with regards to the changes within molecules and atoms and in terms of intramolecular and/or intermolecular bond breaking. In order to identify and describe the students' assimilated knowledge, four questions were asked to 930 students using a written questionna… Show more

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Cited by 29 publications
(41 citation statements)
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“…Chemical Reactions:  Few high school students consider ideas such as energy and stability when explaining chemical reactions (Cokelez, et al, 2008).  Energy is used up in chemical reactions (Kesidou and Duit, et al, 1993).…”
Section: Student Ideas and Boundaries (Chemical Transformations)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Chemical Reactions:  Few high school students consider ideas such as energy and stability when explaining chemical reactions (Cokelez, et al, 2008).  Energy is used up in chemical reactions (Kesidou and Duit, et al, 1993).…”
Section: Student Ideas and Boundaries (Chemical Transformations)mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet even decoded, they can still provide a challenge (Kozma and Russel 1997). For example, a study by Cokelez et al (2008) mentions that learners have a hard time understanding the differences between the hydrogen chloride gas described as HCl and the crystal of sodium chloride, NaCl, mainly because both descriptions are nearly identical. To conclude, the level of abstractness of chemical representations can, in other words, give quite a challenge for learners who have low prior knowledge of and little experience with the representational system of chemistry.…”
Section: Symbolic Representationsmentioning
confidence: 97%
“…For example, the notion of an element (a fairly basic scientific concept) appears to carry different nuances in France to in Anglophone countries [56]. A student in an English school who suggested that the elements that make up [sic] a compound are still present in the compound would probably be considered to have missed an abstract, but significant, feature of how substances are defined in chemistry.…”
Section: Linguistic Environment and Learning Sciencementioning
confidence: 99%