Piaget-style interviews conducted both face-to-face and electronically DJ Wagner 1,2, JJ Rivera 1, Fran Mateycik 1, and Sybillyn Jennings 3 1 Rensselaer.

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Piaget-style interviews conducted both face-to-face and electronically DJ Wagner 1,2, JJ Rivera 1, Fran Mateycik 1, and Sybillyn Jennings 3 1 Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute, 2 Grove City College, 3 Russell Sage College Context: The Science of Information Technology (ScIT) introduces students of all majors to the physical principles behind the operation of information systems. NSF is supporting current efforts to make ScIT materials useful to a large audience. As part of that effort, we are designing diagnostic questions addressing the topics covered in ScIT. Diagnostic questions are most useful when they address student preconceptions and distinguish between different cognitive models [1]. Clinical Interviews have long been regarded as an effective means of eliciting students’ conceptual frameworks [1-3]. Piaget [3] developed the method of critical exploration to see what thoughts lay behind a child’s initial answer to a question, and the PER community has used this method extensively [1-2]. We used Piaget-style interviews to study students’ understanding of total internal reflection (TIR) and how TIR relates to the operation of optical fibers. Study: “What is an optical fiber and what does it do?” Follow-up questions included “How does the fiber keep the light from escaping?” and “What can you tell me about refraction?” RPI work supported in part by NSF CCLI Program under grant DUE Thanks as well to Leo Schowalter for access to ScIT students, and to the rest of the ScIT advisory committee: Karen Cummings, Toh-Ming Lu, Saroj Nayak, Jim Napolitano, Peter Persans, and Wayne Roberge. Comparing E-Interviews with Traditional Face-to-Face Interviews E-Interviews (22 interviewees)Face-To-Face Interviews (12 interviewees)  Can be conducted from wherever, whenever, and however is convenient (at home, listening to music, eating ice cream, in jammies, etc.).  Can hold 2 or 3 interviews simultaneously, typing questions for student 3 while students 1 and 2 are typing their responses. (4 at a time is a bit much.)  Typed thoughts often come across more coherently than spoken thoughts.  Interviewer does not need to worry about their gestures giving away their thoughts about the students answers.  Apparent anonymity lets students express their lack of knowledge with less embarrassment.  Interviewees generally created work-arounds to constraints they experienced. (drew pictures, used keyboard symbols, etc)  Language used to convey interviewees confidence in their answer or description. (umm, I don’t reall know, I guess…, iirc, I could take a wild stab, etc)  Minimal transcription needed!!! (WebCT records conversations in Chat Rooms 1-4.)  Utilize multiple communication channels. (words, gestures, tone of voice, etc)  Substantial transcription time  Transcription difficult to convey gestures, tone of voice.  Scratch Pad (Draw figures, write equations, etc)  Demonstration equipment (optical fiber)  1 interview at a time  Participants do not need a familiarity with internet technology E-interviews can provide valuable information about cognitive models. They provide some advantages over face-to-face interviews but have their own set of limitations. Instructor time is smaller in e-interviews, due to decrease in transcription time; student time is greater in e-interviews. Several students called the e-interview “fun” or “interesting” Demographics of Interviewees 5 In-Service Teachers 2 Physics Faculty 22 ScIT Pre- Instruction 5 Physics Students (REU) 8 ScIT Post- Instruction Faculty, REU students, and in- service (non-physics) teachers were interviewed in a traditional (face-to-face) form in the Summer of ScIT students (both pre- and post-instruction) were interviewed via WebCT’s Chat Room in the Spring of Optical Fiber next to sewing needle. The core of the fiber is 62 microns in diameter; the cladding is 125 microns. Laser light trapped in a plastic fiber. Air serves as the cladding. [1] Lillian C. McDermott, “Bridging the Gap Between Teaching and Learning: The Role of Research,” The Changing Role of Physics Departments in Modern Universities: Proceedings of ICUPE, ed. by E. F. Redish and J.S. Rigden. [2] E. Hunt and J. Minstrell, “A Cognitive Approach to the Teaching of Physics,” Classroom Lessons: Integrating Cognitive Theory and Classroom Practice, ed. by McGilly (MIT Press, 1994). [3] J. Piaget, The child’s conception of the world, trans. by J. & A. Tomlinson. (Littlefield, NJ, 1926/1972). Fiber Optic Network Face-to-Face Interviews E- Interviews