Jump to content

Force Concept Inventory

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Ketiltrout (talk | contribs) at 18:38, 10 August 2016 (+cat). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Force Concept Inventory is a test measuring mastery of concepts commonly taught in a first semester of physics developed by Hestenes, Halloun, Wells, and Swackhamer (1985). It was the first such "concept inventory" and several others have been developed since for a variety of topics.[1][2][3] The FCI was designed to assess student understanding of the Newtonian concepts of force. Hestenes (1998) found that while "nearly 80% of the [students completing introductory college physics courses] could state Newton's Third Law at the beginning of the course. FCI data showed that less than 15% of them fully understood it at the end". These results have been replicated in a number of studies involving students at a range of institutions (see sources section below), and have led to greater recognition in the physics education research community of the importance of students' "active engagement" with the materials to be mastered.

Gender differences

The FCI shows a gender difference in favor of males that has been the subject of some research in regard to gender equity in education. Men score on average about 10% higher.[4]

References

  1. ^ Hallouin, I. A., & Hestenes, D. Common sense concepts about motion (1985). American Journal of Physics, 53, 1043-1055.
  2. ^ Hestenes D, Wells M, Swackhamer G 1992 Force concept inventory. The Physics Teacher 30: 141-166.
  3. ^ Hestenes D 1998. Am. J. Phys. 66:465
  4. ^ Adrian Madsen, Sarah B. McKagan, Eleanor C. Sayre (2013). "The gender gap on concept inventories in physics: what is consistent, what is inconsistent, and what factors influence the gap?".