UBC physics class drops ‘by-rote’ experiments to boost critical thinking

New lab course asks students to do more than ‘write up’ their results.

When an experiment doesn’t go as expected in a new introductory physics lab at the University of British Columbia (UBC) this September, students will take a real-world approach to the ‘failure’.

They’ll compare their experimental data to other students’ data and to simplified models, think critically, and then rework the science—on their own.

And according to new UBC research in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, the self-directed, iterative learning approach dramatically improves students’ critical thinking skills.

“In a traditional lab, a student conducts an experiment as instructed and writes it up, often chalking up discrepancies or issues to human error or lousy equipment—then they move on to the next concept,” says researcher Natasha Holmes, who oversaw the revamped lab at UBC and is lead author of the PNAS study outlining its impact.

“Our framework designs the class more like a research program where scientists have to make decisions about data and uncertainty. It’s more about ingraining the iterative scientific process than any single result.”

That leaves students reanalyzing their data, improving and conducting experiments again, or finding a limitation in the model they were testing.

According to the PNAS study, students using the iterative approach to experimentation were 12 times more likely to propose or carry out improvements to their data or methods than a control-group in a traditional version of the lab.

They were four times more likely to identify and explain a limitation of an underlying scientific model using their data.

The pendulum example

As they worked through simple physics experiments, 130 first-year students in the new lab course were asked to do more than ‘write up’ their results.

They were given explicit instructions to compare data from their experiment to existing models, or to a fellow student’s results, and then decide how to act on the comparisons.

For example, when comparing the period of a pendulum swing at various angles, students are given the autonomy and time to conduct more rounds of measurements to improve the quality of their data.

Eventually, the higher quality data exposes the limitations and assumptions of an established formula—often surprising the student. This builds confidence in their ability to then explore why the simple model failed.

“Repeating experiments removed the intimidation associated with an unfamiliar topic,” says Jan Xue, a life sciences student who took the lab through UBC’s Science One program. “So we built the confidence to modify and improve our methods, which inspired a more self-motivated and inquisitive way of approaching problems.”

Long-term impact

“The exciting thing is that giving the students the guided autonomy to decide how to follow up on a result engrains critical thinking long term,” says UBC physicist Doug Bonn, author on the PNAS paper.

“The improvements persisted when the students were no longer prompted to take the iterative approach, and even as they moved into a more traditional lab course the following year.”

The pilot studies testing the impact of this structure, funded by UBC’s Carl Wieman Science Education Initiative, were conducted from 2012 to 2014 and further improvements are being tested this September. In January 2016, UBC will roll out the new lab formally to a much larger group of students in a new course, Physics 119.

Our framework designs the class more like a research program where scientists have to make decisions about data and uncertainty.

Chris Balma
balma@science.ubc.ca
604.822.5082
c 604-202-5047