4.4 Article

The utility of mechanical objects: Aiding students' learning of abstract and difficult engineering concepts

Journal

JOURNAL OF ENGINEERING EDUCATION
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

AMER SOC ENGINEERING EDUCATION
DOI: 10.1002/jee.20573

Keywords

active learning; cognitive theories; conceptual learning; instructional methods; knowledge transfer

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This study investigates the impact of incorporating simple mechanical objects into individual problem-solving exercises in a thermodynamics course. The results show that students who had access to these objects performed better in problem-solving and comprehension of thermodynamics, with higher mechanical aptitude students benefiting the most.
BackgroundUndergraduate students consistently struggle with mastering concepts related to thermodynamics. Prior work has shown that haptic technology and intensive hands-on workshops help improve learning outcomes relative to traditional lecture-based thermodynamics instruction. The current study takes a more feasible approach to improving thermal understanding by incorporating simple mechanical objects into individual problem-solving exercises.Purpose/HypothesesThis study tests the impact of simple mechanical objects on learning outcomes (specifically, problem-solving performance and conceptual understanding) for third-year undergraduate engineering students in a thermodynamics course across a semester.Design/MethodDuring the semester, 119 engineering students in two sections of an undergraduate thermodynamics course completed three 15-min, self-guided problem-solving tasks, one section without and the other with a simple and relevant physical object. Performance on the tasks and improvements in thermodynamics comprehension (measured via Thermal and Transport Concept Inventory scores) were compared between the two sections.ResultsStudents who had a simple, relevant object available to solve three thermodynamics problems consistently outperformed their counterparts without objects, although only to statistical significance when examining the simple effects for the third problem. At the end of the semester, students who had completed the tasks with the objects displayed significantly greater improvements in thermodynamics comprehension than their peers without the relevant object. Higher mechanical aptitude facilitated the beneficial effect of object availability on comprehension improvements.ConclusionFindings suggest that the incorporation of simple mechanical objects into active learning exercises in thermodynamics curricula could facilitate student learning in thermodynamics and potentially other abstract domains.

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