Exploring senior high-school students’ understanding of electrochemical concepts: patterns of thinking across Turkish and Indonesian contexts
Abstract
This study focuses on examining senior high-school students’ conceptual understanding and difficulties
concerning electrochemistry and comparing patterns of thinking across Turkish and Indonesian
contexts. The Electrochemistry Concept Questionnaire (ECQ) was applied to 516 Indonesian and 516
Turkish high school students right after the teaching of the electrochemistry topics. The ECQ contains
18 multiple-choice questions and these questions belong to five different categories: reactions
occurring during electrolysis, differences between electrolytic and voltaic cells, movement of ions in
voltaic cells, poles in voltaic cells, and voltaic cell reactions. At the end of the study, it was determined
that both Indonesian and Turkish senior high-school students’ understanding of electrochemistry
concepts was relatively weak and they shared common difficulties concerning electrochemical
concepts. While there was no significant difference between the average scores of the students from
both countries on the test, it was determined that there were some significant differences on the basis
of questions. It has been concluded that students from both countries have alternative conceptions
similar to those determined in previous studies such as ‘‘during electrolysis, the electric current
produces ions’’ and ‘‘electrons migrate through the solution from one electrode to the other’’. At the
end of the study, the reasons for the similar results and the significantly different results for the students
of the two countries to comprehend electro-concepts were discussed.