2. Rationale for the Study
Given the unpopularity of physics, the problem of attracting students to physics remains quite pressing. One popular answer to the question regarding how to attract students to physics is by making physics relevant to the lives of students and also by making physics interesting. Indeed over the past two or so decades there have been proposals which aimed at making science education both personally and socially relevant to the lives of students [
16,
17].
However, what is a relevant or interesting physics curriculum? This second question, regardless of whether the latter refers to the explicit or even the taught curriculum, is not easy to answer. The reason is that there are conceptual problems inherent in the notions of both relevancy and interest, which (problems) make these two notions questionable in the context of “science education for all” [
18]. In addition, due to these conceptual problems, questionnaires and interview scripts should be very carefully designed so that there is conceptual clarity in questions and also in statements with which students are supposed to agree or disagree. It is quite interesting to note that, according to a review study, the notion of “relevance”, that is, a key term related to reform proposals in science education, is unclear and ambiguous [
19].
In addition, it must be admitted that the problem of motivation is a complex one. Indeed, motivation, defined as “the process whereby goal-directed activity is instigated and sustained” [
20] (p. 21), involves many factors, such as personal interests, instructional content that is personally and socially relevant and meaningful, psychological state, expectations, values and beliefs about education in general and learning in particular. Thus, a very careful research design is imperative, if one plans to study students’ motivation. Even if one were to focus on one of those factors, because such factor is considered important in the process of motivation, there are still problems to be dealt with.
To illustrate these problems, one can look at the notion of personal interest, that is, a crucially important factor in the learning process [
21]. First and foremost, a student may find science in general, or a science topic in particular, interesting, and still not want to study it. Second, a student’s interest may be situational and thus may not last, something that poses problems with regard to sustained motivation necessary for purposeful learning [
22,
23]. In addition, third, a student may very well be interested in science without liking it. Indeed, it is very likely that a student who simply says during an interview (or answers a questionnaire question) that he or she finds the science class, a particular science topic, or even science as a school subject interesting does not necessarily feel motivated to study science [
24].
On the other hand, if we take into account the fact that the most effective factor contributing to students’ decision to study science is their interest in the various science topics, and that students are interested in science if they are already familiar with these topics [
25], one can understand the challenge that science teachers really face: familiarizing students with science content knowledge presupposes an initial degree of interest in science. The circularity of the argument is quite apparent.
It is for these reasons that students’ own views of what really motivates them to study physics are imperative. In fact, we believe that such views are crucial and should be known before any attempts to design curriculum and teaching sequences are made. The study reported in this paper is an attempt to give students the opportunity, on the one hand, to reflect on what makes them want to study physics, and, on the other hand, to take as much time as they want in order to write about the things they think make them want to study physics.
3. Context and Methods
With the aforementioned rationale in mind we attempted to give students voice based on their school physics class experiences. To this end we decided to use a mixed-methods design involving both a qualitative and a quantitative analysis of journal entries and not questionnaires or interviews. The reason for this is that while questionnaires may be completed by students because they are asked to, or because they have to—and there is also the problem of going into some depth—interviews could place a young student “on the spot”, without giving him/her enough time for reflection.
So we tried to make up for those two shortcomings by utilizing students’ journal entries, as a means of data collection. This was also thought to be more appropriate to our study given that many teaching-learning events take place during a school year, thus providing material for reflection on the part of students. Apparently, an interview, especially with students, no matter how long, imposes certain limitations on such kind of reflection on multiple events. Moreover, reflection needs time, as was said above, something that is not possible through the use of an interview, which must satisfy certain time restrictions (i.e., because of practical reasons and other constraints, interviews last between one and two hours).
The journals were to be used over a period of a whole school year (Mid October–end of April/early May). These were to be anonymous, and the students would write whenever they felt like writing and reflecting, preferably though after each individual lesson (for the reason that they would remember what transpired during the teaching process).The students were not given any guidance or reminders with regard to how to make journal entries, except that their comments would be on three things: (a) whether they found something interesting about their physics lesson; (b) whether and why they really wanted to study their physics lesson at home (following their teacher’s introduction in the classroom), and (c) whether and why they really wanted to learn more about what they were taught in their physics class, that is, about anything relating to their physics lesson, but which goes beyond class requirements and assignments. The teachers who taught these students made sure, by providing specific examples, that the latter understood the difference between finding something interesting about their physics lesson and feeling motivated to study this lesson.
With regard to standardization, the only guidance that was given to the teachers was that they would use their main teaching strategies (e.g., storytelling, inquiry science, art and science connections, argumentation, wonder cognitive conflict, argumentation) the same number of times. Thus, it was agreed upon, through email communication with a sample of teachers, that that number would be five. No guidance to relate these strategies with specific science content was made.
The sample was a convenient sample, in the sense that the participants were all volunteers. The 219 students (140 from junior high schools and 79 from senior high schools attended 46 public high schools, located in various geographical regions of Greece, and were contacted by their teachers after the end of class at the beginning of October. The teachers asked all of the students in each classroom, whether they wanted to participate in a study, explaining to them what the study would involve. The only criterion for their selection was the willingness on their part to participate in this project. It was made explicit to them that they would receive no credit for their participation. Such a sample, however, was quite useful for the purpose of the present research because it included students from various backgrounds and a considerable large number of teachers, who were told to teach using a variety of teaching strategies.
The analysis of students’ journals was based on a grounded theory approach [
26,
27], in which the content of the journals was scrutinized reflexively and iteratively for major emerging categories. This meant that the data analysis was mainly an inductive process (i.e., the initial coding of the data was not based upon a preexisting theoretical framework). However, a deductive analysis was also used in the later phases of the analysis, after the categories had emerged and been finalized. What should be noted though is that the data analysis was a recursive process, in the sense that there was always a moving back and forth, as needed, throughout the whole process. The unit of our analysis was the paragraph. In addition, the reliability of this analysis was achieved with the use of two external researchers who checked both the codes and the coding process. Both external researchers check all the material, and all codes. Given the nature of the design and the possibility of an overlap between the codes they had to agree on all codes.
The final categories, as described below, can show their core as well their borders (e.g., between “teaching strategies” and “demonstrations”, “relevance to everyday life” and “connection to the self’).
Relevance to everyday life: Students’ awareness of a relationship of any aspect of physics (e.g., content, science process skills, applications) with human life (in general);
Connection to the self: Students’ awareness that an aspect of physics is related in some way to their own self, their own life;
Teaching strategy: The way the subject matter was presented to the students.
Demonstrations: Experimental and hand-on activities carried out by the teacher at any point of the teaching process;
Utility: Students’ awareness that they can do something in their daily life with their knowledge of physics (e.g., concepts, process skills);
Purpose: Having or searching for a reason to study something that relates to physics;
Social significance: Students’ awareness that physics has helped shape our society to its present advanced state;
Scientists’ life experiences: Students’ awareness of the conditions in which scientists lived and worked as well as what they went through in order to contribute to the development of scientific knowledge.
4. Results and Discussion
The results of the present study do not support any generalizations given the fact that the sample consisted of volunteers. Indeed, it may very well be the case that such a sample is correlated with the research findings. Moreover, the lack of standardization, with regard to teacher and student activities (due to the way the sample was drawn and the difficulty to standardize teachers’ activities), made the interpretation of the results problematic, even though care was taken to deal with this specific problem in the coding process. In our view an important limitation of this study is lack of information about how each specific strategy was implemented. Nevertheless, the analysis of students’ journal entries did yield a number of categories, depending upon the context of this analysis (see
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3), which means that students are motivated by a number of factors, and these need to be considered by science teachers and science educators alike. These categories can also provide food for thought for those who will design research designs in this area in the future.
What should also be mentioned is that “relevance to everyday life”, “utility” and “connection to the self” were coded as separate final categories, on the basis of the meaning that students gave to them. For example, the paragraph “I want to study physics when I see that is useful in my life [...] the electricity chapter we did yesterday made me want to study because electricity is something that is part of my own life [...] not just electric current and light bulbs”, rendered two final categories, namely, “utility” and “connection to the self”. By the same token, the paragraph, “Yesterday, when we were told about the applications of levers in our daily life, I realized that we use them all in our life [...] so I tried to read more stuff on levers and see how my own life can be made easier” rendered two categories, namely “relevance to everyday life” and “utility”.
It is likely that a category may have been counted more than once, due to the overlapping of the meaning of the categories “relevance to everyday life”, “utility”, and “connection to the self”. However, such likelihood is small given the final coding of the categories (see previous section). On the other hand, a category may have not been counted at all. For example, in the aforementioned example about levers, a third category, namely, that of “connection to the self” could be added, as the pupil, who made this specific entry, in addition to seeing the relevance of levers to life, tried to learn more about them, in order to make his/her own life easier.
However, despite these shortcomings of the present analysis, what counts is the emerged categories, form a qualitative perspective, and some differences between the groups form a quantitative point of view. The most important findings can be summarized as follows:
What a student finds interesting does not necessarily make him/her to want to study his/her physics lesson, let alone to study it further, that is, to study it because he/she wants to know more than what is required by the school curriculum. This is, perhaps, the most important message that this study can send to the science education community;
While “utility”, “relevance to everyday life” and “teaching strategies” were the most cited reasons for making junior high school students want to study their lesson and also want to study it further, for senior high school it was “connection to the self” and “utility” the most cited reasons;
Flashy demonstrations that make science fun and are found by students to be very interesting are not always a reason for making them to want to study science, at least physics;
The percentage of students (from both groups) who made entries decreased significantly from what students found interesting about their physics lesson to what really made them want to study their lesson, and then to what made them to devote time to learn more about their physics lesson beyond class requirements.
However, there are some other findings that also deserve attention. First, identical reasons for finding the physics lesson interesting and wanting to study it at home were found for both groups of high school students, that is, lower grades and higher grades, but with considerable variation in the frequencies regarding journal entries and the percentage of students who made those entries (see
Table 1,
Table 2 and
Table 3). For example, while for junior high school students “demos” were found to be the most frequent factor that made the lesson interesting (100% of students made 467 entries), for senior high school students it was the “connection to the self” that was found to be the most important reason for finding the lesson interesting (70% of students made 256 entries). Also one can see in
Table 1 that a higher percentage of students from the junior high school group made many more entries compared to the senior high school group with regard to “relevance to everyday life” and “teaching strategy”. Such a difference is interesting and could be interpreted by reference to the fact that for the senior high school group the “connection to the self” was the category with the highest number of journal entries (256) and the highest percentage of students who made those entries (83.5). For the older group of students this latter category must have “overshadowed” the other two, that is, relevance to everyday life and teaching strategies, something that is also supported by the data in
Table 2.
Second, contributing motivational factors for more than 50% of students from the junior high school group were found to be “relevance to life”, “teaching strategy”, and “utility”, while for the pupils from the senior high school group it was “utility” and “connection to the self”. In addition, it is quite interesting to note that these two factors were also found important by more than 50% of the students from the senior high group when it came to their decision to study their lesson further, beyond class requirements and assignments. With regard to the junior high school group, it was only “utility” that was thought a contributing factor by more than 40% of pupils when it came the same decision.
Third, while the analysis of students” journal entries rendered five categories for the junior high school group and six categories for the senior high group, in the case in which students wrote about what they found interesting about their physics lesson, the analysis, in the case in which students wrote about what really made them want to study their lesson, rendered eight categories. For example, “purpose” and “the scientists” life experiences” were found by some students to be important reasons for making them want to study.
Fourth, “social significance” was found an important reason for some students from the older group, but no student from the younger group made any reference to this factor.
Fifth, the idea of “utility” is considered important by both student groups, while “connection to the self” is an important reason for wanting to study and even want to study further. This latter finding is in line with previous research findings, namely, that personal identity is an important factor to be considered in the context of learning school science [
17].
Sixth, “purpose of learning” and “the scientists’ life experiences” were reported factors that contributed to pupils’ motivation to study and study further. However, there was more than 30% difference between the two groups. Why purpose was considered by more than one third of the senior high school group an important contributing factor and only by less than 3% of the junior high group could be attributed to the possibility that older pupils were in search of meaning compared to younger ones. It may also have been that the idea of purpose was not externalized by the younger pupils. On the other hand, the fact that the inclusion of socio-scientific issues must have played a role in making the older students find a purpose in physics should also be considered.
Seventh, even though demonstrations were found by all pupils to be something interesting, only 30% from the junior high school group and 15% from the senior high school group thought that demonstrations was a factor that motivated them to study. These two percentages dropped to 9% and 0% respectively, when it came to pupils’ motivation to study further, beyond class requirements and assignments.
Eight, with regard to the teaching strategies, “cognitive conflict” and “inquiry science” were identified as the strongest motivators among all students, with cognitive conflict to be the most important reason for making one want to learn physics. Indeed cognitive conflict was identified as a category with the highest frequency and the highest number of students. Such finding is in line with previous research findings [
17].
It is interesting to point out that storytelling, integrating art and science, and dramatization were not considered by several students as something that would make them want to study their physics lesson, even though they did find these strategies interesting. One reason may very well be how these strategies were implemented, something that cannot be assessed in the context of the present study—and this is one of its limitations—while another reason may be that teaching strategies are not considered as important as utility and connection to the self. What, however, needs to be pointed out is that, while 92% and 73% of the students from the junior high school group and the senior high school group respectively found the strategy interesting (and very interesting), these percentages dropped to 67% and 37% respectively when it came to students’ motivation to study physics (see
Table 4).
It deserves to be noted that, even though the category “purpose of learning” was found to be an important reason for making students from the older group to want to study physics (39%)—as these students made an explicit reference to “why they want to study physics”—purpose must have been an implicit reason for many students. It may very well be the case that “relevance of subject matter to everyday life”, “practical utility” and “connection of physics content to the self” motivated some students to study physics and even study it further beyond class requirements, without though making this explicit in their journal entries.
What, therefore, must be pointed out here is that the list of the questions that are commonly and explicitly asked by science educators [
28] needs to be complemented by a question of purpose. Notwithstanding the importance of such questions as “What do we know?” (the ontological question), “How do we know?” (the procedural question), “What can do we with what we know?” (the technological question), and “How can we communicate what we know?” (the communicative question), a question of purpose, namely, “Why should we know?” should also be kept in mind when planning curriculum and instruction, despite the difficulty to answer such question [
29]. As Woolnough commented, the problem is not that the theories of learning get the answers wrong, but that they ask the wrong questions in the first place. According to him, instead of asking “how do students learn?”, we should ask “what makes students want to learn?” [
30].
What should also be pointed out is that the notion of relevance, although an important one in curriculum planning and instruction, for many senior high school students, it was the idea of the connection of self that played a role in their decision to study physics, and even to study it further, that is, beyond class requirements. As can be seen in
Table 4, the percentages of senior high school students were 73 and 62 respectively. Why the percentage of junior high school students, with regard to the category “connection to the self”, was not as high as that of senior high school students, could be explained by reference to the fact that a higher percentage of older students are in search of an existential meaning, compared with their younger counterparts. Certainly, in-depth interviews with some of the junior high school students could shed more light on this difference between the two student groups, but that was not part of the present study.
Nevertheless, the emerged categories (see
Table 5 and
Table 6), along with the quantitative data, especially the student percentages, provide food for thought for both science educators and science teachers, especially those who teach physics in secondary education. The implications of the above findings for school science education, especially with regard to curriculum planning and the design of teaching sequences, are the following: First, engagement in science is a complex process, which is influenced by a number of factors, some of which are quite personal and hence unpredictable. These factors should certainly complement the factors that enhance intrinsic motivation, and which are recommended by the literature (e.g., curiosity, control, challenge and fantasy) [
20]. In addition, second, the categories of “purpose” and “self” point to the crucial role that phenomenological approaches can play in the teaching and learning of physics, and perhaps science in general. Intentionality that may very well be absent from constructivist methodologies, but, according to this study, intentionality is crucial, at least, for the older students.
5. Summary and Conclusions
This study investigated the reasons secondary school students give for what they find interesting about their physics lessons taught by their teacher, and also for what makes them want to study these lessons. Because of its limitations (i.e., volunteer sample, lack of standardization in students’ and especially teachers’ activities), this study cannot be used to influence science education policy—this would require more research and more structured designs—but its results can provide some useful insights into the science curriculum, and also into the design of teaching sequences. Even though some of the identified categories, such as “relevance to everyday life”, “cognitive conflict”, “teaching through storytelling”, “art-science connections” are well-known motivators in science education [
17,
20,
25], four specific categories deserve particular attention: “connection to the self”, “purpose”, “utility”, and “cognitive conflict”. These categories, along with some quantitative indicators, such as number of journal entries and student percentages, challenge us to rethink what makes the ideas of science, especially those of physics, meaningful or simply relevant to the life of students. The importance of the categories “connection to the self” and “cognitive conflict” is supported by previous research [
29,
31,
32,
33,
34].
With regard to teaching physics to students in the higher grades of secondary school, the idea of “relevance” seems to be complemented with the idea of the self. Indeed, evidence from this study suggests that, at least for the older secondary school students, the context of everyday life, which supposedly makes physics, and science in general, relevant to the life of the students, is not enough to motivate students to want to study physics, unless in this context students perceive a relationship with their own self. The explicit reference, at least on the part of the older secondary school students, to the idea of self—and not just to everyday life (which can be in many cases quite abstract)—needs to be seriously considered by science teachers and science educators. Osborne had argued that “Any consideration of the role of science education must begin not with an internalist view of its content and curricula, but rather with an externalist perception of the society it serves” [
35] (p. 42, italics mine). The data from this study provide some evidence that “the perception of society” should be complemented with “the perception of the self”. This is an important message for science teachers if they want to encourage involvement with school science. The analysis of students’ journal entries did provide evidence that even the notion of utility was perceived in relation to students’ own self, to their personal life, and not in relation to everyday life in general. Such findings also point to the crucial role that philosophy of education can play in science education [
36]. Indeed, notwithstanding the importance of methodological sophistication, what matters in the end is conceptual clarity in our theoretical framework [
29,
37].
And if emotions are crucially important in the context of teaching and learning school science [
38,
39,
40,
41,
42], and the empirical evidence so far suggests that that engagement in science is an important parameter of the learning process [
2,
3,
43,
44], then the categories identified by the present study should be seriously considered by the science education community. Certainly, further in-depth studies of the reasons students themselves give for their motivation to study physics, and science in general, need to be conducted, as these studies will help us better understand what makes students “want to learn”. For as Margaret Bateson argued, what is important is not what one knows but what one is willing to learn [
45].
Thus, the results of the present study have two important implications for future research. First, we need to pay attention to the research design—very few efforts have been made to go beyond the use of questionnaires [
33]—so that we capture the complexity of the teaching-learning process. In addition, second, we need to deepen our understanding with regard to the decline of student interest in science (see
Table 4).