Project Details
Using Eye Movement Modeling Examples as an Instructional Tool in Organic Chemistry
Subject Area
General and Domain-Specific Teaching and Learning
Organic Molecular Chemistry - Synthesis and Characterisation
Organic Molecular Chemistry - Synthesis and Characterisation
Term
from 2017 to 2021
Project identifier
Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft (DFG) - Project number 329801962
Investigating how to improve students' chemical understanding is a central ambition of educational research in chemistry at the college level. For most students, organic chemistry still represents a very labor-intense subject and students' reliance on memorizing mechanisms has been extensively documented. The ability to reason appropriately with a given mechanism, i.e. interpreting a given structure in a mechanistic process, is the flagship of organic chemistry and at the same time one of the main impediments for students. Students often perceive lectures on reaction mechanisms as a 'presentation of a series of illustrative ([but] generally unrelated) cases', leading to a limited ability to chemically interpret structural representations (Corey & Cheng, 1989, p. 4; Flynn & Ogilvie, 2015). Evidence from cognitive learning sciences show that explicit cueing on relevant information by highlighting relevant features of a representation, especially through an eye movement modeling of an expert, can facilitate this learning process. Helping students to mimic an expert gaze in combination with a verbal explanation might close the documented gap for students to interpret structural representations such as a mechanism successfully and to link it with appropriate conceptual knowledge. Therefore, we aim to draw upon these results to develop and test an instructional setting that explicitly uses eye movement modeling examples to convey the mechanistic reasoning process of an expert to students.
DFG Programme
Research Grants
International Connection
USA
Cooperation Partner
Dr. Melissa Weinrich