Fruit Puzzle: An Inquiry-Based Activity to Investigate High School Students' Understanding of the Relationship between the Concepts of Density and Concentration of Solution at the Submicroscopic Level
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Issued Date
2022-12-13
Resource Type
ISSN
00219584
eISSN
19381328
Scopus ID
2-s2.0-85141953557
Journal Title
Journal of Chemical Education
Volume
99
Issue
12
Start Page
4175
End Page
4180
Rights Holder(s)
SCOPUS
Bibliographic Citation
Journal of Chemical Education Vol.99 No.12 (2022) , 4175-4180
Suggested Citation
Duangpummet P., Yodyingyong S., Chenprakhon P. Fruit Puzzle: An Inquiry-Based Activity to Investigate High School Students' Understanding of the Relationship between the Concepts of Density and Concentration of Solution at the Submicroscopic Level. Journal of Chemical Education Vol.99 No.12 (2022) , 4175-4180. 4180. doi:10.1021/acs.jchemed.2c00161 Retrieved from: https://repository.li.mahidol.ac.th/handle/123456789/84131
Title
Fruit Puzzle: An Inquiry-Based Activity to Investigate High School Students' Understanding of the Relationship between the Concepts of Density and Concentration of Solution at the Submicroscopic Level
Author(s)
Author's Affiliation
Other Contributor(s)
Abstract
A simple inquiry-based activity called "Fruit Puzzle"was designed to investigate high school students' understanding of the relationship between the concepts of density and solution concentration at a submicroscopic level. The first activity allowed students to predict whether five types of fruit would sink or float in water and asked them to explain the reason for their prediction. This activity aims to investigate their prior knowledge of the concept of density. Then, the students were asked to experiment and observe the result. In the second activity, students were challenged to design and perform an experiment to compare the density of each type of fruit using table salt or sugar and water. Finally, in the third activity, students were tasked with designing a method that would allow the fruit to stay in the solution without sinking or floating. Two postlaboratory questions were used to investigate how students could relate the concept of density to the solution concentration at both the submicroscopic and symbolic levels. The sample size of this study was 98 Thai students in grade 9. The results from the activity sheet showed that students could relate the concept of density with the sink and float phenomenon in the prediction activity and could relate the concept of density with the concentration of the solution in the experiment-planning step. However, the results from the postlaboratory questions indicated that the students still found it difficult to explain the concepts at both the submicroscopic and symbolic levels.
