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College physics: Labs vs. Recitations? |
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| Sep24-10, 02:03 AM | #1 |
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College physics: Labs vs. Recitations?
Have there been any studies done as to which is more effective as supplements to teaching introductory physics courses, labs or recitations? I've been having discussions with a fellow grad student who has never taught a intro physics lab about their effectiveness and also with a professor who seems to think they're usefulness is minimal at best. So what say the physics departments of the world?
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| Sep24-10, 03:48 AM | #2 |
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For those of us not familiar with your terminology: What's the difference between the two? It seems to me that a lab is a practical, experimental class and a recitation (if I understand what you mean by that word) is a theory class.
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| Sep24-10, 06:50 AM | #3 |
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In US terminology, a "lab" is a hands-on exercise with equipment, e.g. measuring the period of a pendulum as a function of length and using it to verify that it's proportional to the square root of the length, calculate g, etc.
A "recitation" can be a question-and-answer sesssion with students, or going over homework exercises, etc. In large universities these are distinct from "lectures" which are a presentation of new material, often with demonstrations. Professors deliver lectures, whereas graduate students often handle recitations. At small schools like mine, that don't have graduate teaching assistants, lecture classes include the "recitation" functions. |
| Sep24-10, 07:33 AM | #4 |
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Recognitions:
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College physics: Labs vs. Recitations?
Our intro classes follow the standard model: each week has 2 lectures, 2 recitations, and 1 lab (5 credit hour class). There has been a trend toward "studio" type classes which combine lecture and lab:
http://bama.ua.edu/~stjones/studio/ This approach fits in with the 'peer instruction' model of teaching http://www.physics.umd.edu/perg/role/PIProbs/ Which claims that students "learn better" when they teach themselves. IMO, the specific method matters less than the ability of the instructor. Put a mumbling, sadistic, disinterested teacher in *any* environment, and the students will perform poorly. So, some people are gung-ho for studio classes and peer instruction, others prefer the traditional format. I try and blend both- using in-class discussion combined with explicit worked examples (and an open-door policy) seems to be working. Of course, in order to reach a conclusion over which is better, there has to be an *assessment*. Again, IMO, there isn't a readily available assessment yet that measures student learning, so it's difficult to really compare the two approaches. |
| Sep24-10, 01:10 PM | #5 |
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I like the idea of college students having to actually learn a scientific law through the use of a lab instead of being just told to verify it the way we tell them to. Our university doesn't have recitation sessions but our intro to physics courses are considered high-risk to our university. It seems like we have a lot of problems with students who struggle with algebra too far into the semester and can't really DO problems. I want to try to get our department to let us do an experimental recitation session, completely voluntary, and see if students attending them perform better than students who choose not to attend. It feels like the labs are just "come in, sit down, follow the lab manual and write down stuff in the lab manual". It doesn't feel like this is really teaching them anything.
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| Sep24-10, 01:14 PM | #6 |
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| Sep24-10, 02:45 PM | #7 |
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I think that it depends a lot on the individuals. To some students labs are very important while for others they are all but worthless depending on how good intuition they got and how interested they are in experimental physics.
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| Sep24-10, 04:19 PM | #8 |
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1st year labs are boring but are useful for building intuition for subjects of physics other than mechanics. Recitations on the other hand were ... mostly used by people hoping to get help on the problem sheets. Demonstrations done in class were better than both though.
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| Sep24-10, 06:31 PM | #9 |
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In my experience (both as student and teacher), recitation sessions consist of small groups of students (here, it's half the class; there, it was about 1/4 of the class) that is devoted to solving specific problems- homework, practice test, or other. For my class, I teach one and another prof the other (each section meets 2x per week). Labs are basically the equivalent: small groups of students work together to solve specific problems with some sort of adult supervision on hand. So I guess recitation sections are the theory equivalent of lab sections. |
| Sep29-10, 09:57 AM | #10 |
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If y'all are interested in a student's perspective...
I find labs interesting, but they don't have much educational value. It was like a previous poster mentioned: I walk into the lab, I follow the instructions to the letter, I fill in the data tables -- and then I read the textbook to find out what all the junk meant. I understand that physics splits into theoretical and experimental physics, and the intro physics classes are supposed to give you a taste of that dichotomous yet interrelated relationship, but frankly, I don't believe it's practical to introduce the experimental side so early. Intro physics courses are supposed to develop physical intuition for problem-solving skills, at least as far as I'm aware. Physics labs do little for me. What seems to be my main source of struggle in the class is the ability to adapt to new circumstances (for instance, in projectile motion exercises, you're typically given a list of knowns with one or possibly two unknowns; when asked to find three unknowns, the problems often take me over an hour, if I can do them at all). I feel that recitation would be far more conducive towards stimulating intuition, at least in my own case. Lectures should be about introducing concepts and linking these concepts to foundational concepts. Recitations can then be used to solidify these concepts in the student's minds. Just my opinion. |
| Oct5-10, 07:25 AM | #11 |
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| Oct5-10, 07:33 AM | #12 |
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Freshmen level labs are essentially an exercise in following directions, in my experience. Recitations are good, if you force students to come prepared for example by having a quiz at the end of the recitation. This way you can work out gaps in your knowledge, and not just listen to a foreign grad student mumble about stuff you don't understand.
Honestly though, I am very glad I'm not in the position of trying to teach a general audience anything about physics. Especially when their goal is probably to pass the course while learning as little about physics as possible. |
| Oct5-10, 08:22 AM | #13 |
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| Oct7-10, 12:03 AM | #14 |
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I've never liked labs, and have always thought they were pointless. I'm guessing the idea is to demonstrate theoretical concepts, but they've never seemed to accomplish that; as it's been said they are more of an exercise in reading comprehension.
Not to mention for freshman level labs, the equipment in my experience is mostly junk; our lab computers still run Windows 98, and it takes about 15 minutes to export data into Excel for analysis... (It probably also doesn't help that my labs/recitations are late at night.) I enjoy recitations much more; in the class I'm taking it's basically an hour period with discussion of problems and a quiz; they're easy, but I enjoy them because I'm the physics/engineering nerd-type who can sit around and talk about physics all day... |
| Oct7-10, 12:17 AM | #15 |
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The amount that I like labs (in college and in high school) varies greatly from teacher to teacher. The teachers that assign labs that are just following directions for 2 hrs seem pointless. They end up teaching nothing new and the students are uninterested. Also, and this is especially true in high school, the labs are poorly set up. The problem is that there is not enough money for good equipment so there is extremely high percent error. However, I really enjoy the open ended labs where students much use concepts that they know to complete a task. No directions. Just an objective. This makes students utilize concepts as opposed to just memorizing equations and processes. It also improves problem solving skills while keeping students interested.
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| Oct7-10, 12:51 AM | #16 |
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| Oct7-10, 07:43 AM | #17 |
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