Students’ metacognition knowledge and skills during physics problem-solving process

This study examined how students utilized metacognition while solving physics problems. A case study design was implemented, involving 30 11th-grade students. Data were collected by using open-ended physics problems, with a think-aloud strategy applied during the process. Both quantitative and quali...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Zeynep Dulger, Feral Ogan-Bekiroglu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2025-07-01
Series:Physical Review Physics Education Research
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/4s17-6dxs
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Summary:This study examined how students utilized metacognition while solving physics problems. A case study design was implemented, involving 30 11th-grade students. Data were collected by using open-ended physics problems, with a think-aloud strategy applied during the process. Both quantitative and qualitative analyses were conducted using the metacognition during problem-solving rubric, classifying students as either experts or novices. The findings revealed several key insights: First, the majority of high school students fall into the novice category, struggling with the application of metacognitive knowledge and skills while solving physics problems. Second, expert students demonstrate strong evaluation and planning skills but limited metacognitive knowledge and monitoring abilities. Third, novice students exhibit major deficiencies in metacognitive knowledge and monitoring. Fourth, assessment practices focusing heavily on final results may hinder the development of deeper metacognition and problem-solving skills. Fifth, metacognitive knowledge and monitoring are crucial for generating successful solutions for scientific problems, especially in high-complexity tasks. Last, familiarity with the content and the complexity level of the problem may influence students’ success in problem solving. The metacognition rubric developed for this research may serve as a valuable tool for future studies in the field.
ISSN:2469-9896