Hi Jim:

In my work on dispelling student misconceptions my colleague and I have found 
in over a decade of research that the most efficient approach requires you to 
activate the misconception and THEN show them why that misconception leads to 
unsupported predictions and THEN ALSO to show that there is evidence for a 
conception that is more predictive and more supported by the evidence so that 
the state of the world that the evidence supports is a more fruitful way to 
think about things.

We have also found that we have to dispel each common misconception (see 
Scott's 50 myths for what is really a compilation of about 200 myths (sorry 
Scott, I haven't counted them all up!)) on a one-by-one basis. There is NO 
TRANSFER because each seems to sit as an independent type of factoid within the 
students' minds.

I suspect something similar is happening for you here. You really have to 
attack these misconceptions directly, assertively, vigorously and 
refutationally. Otherwise they are unlikely to change.

Annette

Annette Kujawski Taylor, Ph. D.
Professor, Psychological Sciences
University of San Diego
5998 Alcala Park
San Diego, CA 92110
[email protected]
________________________________________
Subject: Student resistance to some ideas?
From: "Jim Clark" <[email protected]>
Date: Sat, 27 Apr 2013 12:21:10 -0500
X-Message-Number: 2

Hi

In my culture and psych course, I spend some time on the idea that (at least in 
modern times) overt discrimination tends to be observed mostly under ambiguous 
situations (e.g., poking studies, ignoring evidence showing innocence in mock 
trials, ...).  Nonetheless, when I ask students on tests whether discrimination 
in favor of white versus non-white applicants is more likely when
a. both have strong qualifications
b. both have moderate qualifications
c. both have weak qualifications
d. all of the above

Students overwhelmingly choose d. all of the above, even when I occasionally 
mention casually in class something very close to this scenario.

Is there something wrong with the question?  Do people have other examples 
where students appear resistant to acceptance of some taught idea?

Take care
Jim


James M. Clark
Professor & Chair of Psychology
[email protected]
Room 4L41A
204-786-9757
204-774-4134 Fax
Dept of Psychology, U of Winnipeg
515 Portage Ave, Winnipeg, MB
R3B 0R4  CANADA
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