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Using A Digital Planetarium For Teaching Seasons To Undergraduates
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Metadata
Title
Using A Digital Planetarium For Teaching Seasons To Undergraduates
Abstract
Computer-generated simulations and visualizations in digital planetariums have the potential to bridge the comprehension gap in astronomy education. Concepts involving three-dimensional spatial relationships can be difficult for the layperson to understand, since much of the traditional teaching materials used in astronomy education remain two-dimensional in nature. We study the student performance after viewing visualizations in an immersive theater and in non-immersive classrooms for the topic of seasons in an introductory undergraduate astronomy course. Using weekly multiple-choice quizzes to gauge student learning, comparison of curriculum tests taken immediately after instruction and pre-instruction quizzes show a significant difference in the results of students who viewed visualizations in the planetarium versus their counterparts who viewed non-immersive content in their classrooms, and those in the control group that saw no visualizations whatsoever. These results suggest that the immersive visuals help by freeing up cognitive resources that can be devoted to learning, while visualizations shown in the classroom may be an intrinsically inferior experience for students.
Date
01/06/2015
Citation
Yu, K. C., Sahami, K., Sahami, V., & Sessions, L. C. (2015). Using A Digital Planetarium For Teaching Seasons To Undergraduates. Journal of Astronomy & Earth Sciences Education (JAESE), 2(1), 33–50. https://doi.org/10.19030/jaese.v2i1.9276
Type of Publication
Author(s)
Yu, Ka Chun | Sahami, Kamran | Sahami, Victoria | Sessions, Larry C.
Content
Construct
Methodology
Research Setting
Target Group
Institution(s)
Denver Museum of Nature & Science | Metropolitan State University of Denver | Metropolitan State University of Denver | Metropolitan State University of Denver
Journal Name
Journal of Astronomy & Earth Sciences Education (JAESE)
Peer-Reviewed Status
Publisher
The Clute Institute
Volume
2
Issue Number
1
ISSN
2374-6254, 2374-6246
Resource Type
Nation(s) of Study
United States of America
Language
English