Issue 4, 2014

“Combustion always produces carbon dioxide and water”: a discussion of university chemistry students' use of rules in place of principles

Abstract

On the basis of responses to written questions administered to more than one thousand introductory chemistry students, we claim that students often rotely apply memorized combustion rules instead of reasoning based on explanatory models for what happens at the molecular level during chemical reactions. In particular, many students argue that combustion produces carbon dioxide and/or water, even when the reactants do not contain hydrogen or carbon, an answer that is inconsistent with the principle of atom conservation. Our study also corroborates the finding that students frequently say that oxygen is “necessary for” or “used in” combustion reactions without connecting this reasoning to conservation principles, suggesting that this likewise may be a rotely applied, memorized rule.

Article information

Article type
Paper
Submitted
28 Apr 2014
Accepted
31 Jul 2014
First published
22 Aug 2014

Chem. Educ. Res. Pract., 2014,15, 763-776

Author version available

“Combustion always produces carbon dioxide and water”: a discussion of university chemistry students' use of rules in place of principles

A. D. Robertson and P. S. Shaffer, Chem. Educ. Res. Pract., 2014, 15, 763 DOI: 10.1039/C4RP00089G

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