The National
Science Education Standards have additonal information. See especially
Chapter
6 and the age specific Content Standards: K-4 and
Content Standards: 5-8.
This page is under construction - check back. Last updated 27 October 2000. Comments?
Phillips, W.C. 1991, Earth Science Misconceptions, Science Teacher Feb'91 pp 21-23.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1999). Naïve Ideas in Earth
Science. MSTA Journal, 44(2) (Fall’99), pp.26-30. http://www.msta-mich.org
Geosphere
Hapkiewicz, A. (1999). Naïve Ideas in Earth Science. MSTA Journal, 44(2) (Fall’99), pp.26-30. http://www.msta-mich.org
- When things dissolve they “disappear.”
- Materials can only exhibit properties of one state of matter.
- Melting and dissolving are confused.
- Dew formed on the outside of glass comes from the inside of the glass.
- Expansion of matter is due to the expansion of particles rather than the increased particle spacing.
- Molecules of a gas “just float” rather than being kept in the gaseous state by their motion.
- There is not empty space between molecules, rather students believe there is dust, germs or “air’ between the particles of air.
- Particles of solids have no motion.
- Relative particle spacing among solids, liquids, and gases is incorrectly perceived and not generally related to the densities of the states.
- Frequent disregard for particle conservation and orderliness when describing physical changes.
- Gases are not matter because most are invisible.
- Absence of conservation of particles during a chemical change.
- Failure to perceived that individual substances and properties correspond to a certain type of particle. Formation of a new substance with new properties is seen as simply happening rather than as a result of particle rearrangement.
- The temperature of an object drops when it freezes.
- Mass and volume, which both describe an “amount of matter,” are the same property.
- “Steam” is the visible cloud of water vapor over boiling water.
- Energy is a “thing.” and object or something that is tangible.
- The chemistry of biological systems does not follow all the same rules of thermodynamics as other systems.
- “Cold” can be transferred.
- Energy is truly lost in many energy transformations.
Also see misconceptions for Vision and hearing
and Color and Vision.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1999). Naïve Ideas in Earth
Science. MSTA Journal, 44(2) (Fall’99), pp.26-30. http://www.msta-mich.org
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.
- Gases are not matter because most are invisible.
- Gases do not have mass.
- A "thick" liquid has a higher density than water.
- Mass and volume, which both describes an "amount of matter," are the same property.
- Air and oxygen are the same gas.
- Helium and hot air are the same gas.
- Expansion of matter is due to the expansion of particles, rather than the increased particle spacing.
- Particles of solids have not motions.
- Relative particle spacing among solids, liquids, and gasses is incorrectly perceived and not generally related to the densities of the states. (Microscopic model does not represent macroscopic properties.)
- Materials can only exhibit properties of one state of matter.
- Particles possess the same properties as the materials they compose. For example, atoms of copper are "orange and shiny," gas molecules are "transparent," and solid molecules are "Hard."
- Melting/freezing and boiling/condensation are often understood only in terms of water.
- Particles viewed as mini-versions of the substances they comprise: oxygen molecules are invisible, water molecules are tiny droplets, and diamond molecules are hard.
- Particles misrepresented in sketches: no differentiation is made between atoms and molecules.
- Particles misrepresented and undifferentiated in concepts involving elements, compounds, mixtures, solutions, and substances.
- Frequent disregard for particle conservation and orderliness when describing changes.
- Absence of conservation of particles during a chemical change.
- Chemical, rather than interactive. After chemical change, the original substances are perceived as remaining even though they are altered.
- Failure to perceived that individual substances and properties correspond to a certain type of particle ... formation of a new substance with new properties is seen as simply happening, rather than as a result of particle rearrangement.
- The "smoke" seen with dry ice is carbon dioxide vapors.
- The temperature of an object drops when it freezes.
- The chemistry in biological systems does not follow all the same rules of thermodynamics as other systems.
- Steam is visible water gas molecules.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.
- Energy is truly lost in many energy transformations.
- There is no relationship between matter and energy.
- If energy is conserved, why are we running out of it?
- Energy can be changed completely from one form to another (no energy losses).
- Things “use up” energy.
- Energy is confined to some particular origin, such as what we get from food or what the electric company sells.
- An object at rest has no energy.
- The only type of potential energy is gravitational.
- Gravitational potential energy depends only on the height of an object.
- Doubling the speed of a moving object doubles the kinetic energy.
- Energy is a “thing.” This is a fuzzy notion, probably because of the way we talk about newton-meters or joules. It is difficult to imagine an “amount” of an abstraction.
- The terms “energy” and “force” are interchangeable.
- From the non-scientific point of view, “work” is synonymous with “labor.” It is hard to convince someone that more “work” is probably being done playing football for one hour than studying an hour for a quiz.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.Hapkiewicz, A. (1999). Naïve Ideas in Earth Science. MSTA Journal, 44(2) (Fall’99), pp.26-30. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Time can be measured without establishing the beginning of the interval.
- The location of an object can be described by stating its distance from a given point, ignoring direction.
- The distance an object travels and its displacement are always the same.
- An object’s speed is the same as its velocity.
- If an object is accelerating, then the object is speeding up.
- An object’s acceleration cannot change direction.
- Acceleration always occurs in the same direction as an object is moving.
- If an object has a speed of zero (even instantaneously), it has no acceleration.
- The only “natural” motion is for an object to be at rest.
- If an object is at rest, no forces are acting on the object.
- A rigid solid cannot be compressed or stretched.
- Only animate objects can exert a force. Thus, if an object is at rest on a table, no forces are acting on it.
- Force is a property of an object. An object has force, and when it runs out of force it stops moving.
- The motion of an object is always in the direction of the net force applied to the object.
- Large objects exert a greater force than small objects.
- A force is needed to keep an object moving with a constant speed.
- Friction always hinders motion. Thus, you always want to eliminate friction.
- Frictional forces are only due to irregularities in surfaces moving past one another.
- Rocket propulsion is due to exhaust gases pushing on something behind the rocket.
- When dropped in a vacuum, objects of different masses fall at different speeds.
- When dropped in a vacuum, objects fall at constant speeds.
- A simple machine with a mechanical advantage greater than one is easier to use than a simple machine with a mechanical advantage less than one.
- Any force times any distance is work.
- Machines put out more work than people put in.
- Power is the same as force or work.
- Work is any activity one gets tired doing, gets paid for doing, or doesn’t like doing.
- Forces acting on bodies/objects are associated with living things.
- Constant motion requries a constant force.
- If a body is not moving, there is no force acting upon it.
- Objects in a vacuum fall at a constant speed.
- If a body is in mortion, there is a force acting upon it in the direction of motion.
- There is no gracity in space.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.Hapkiewicz, A. (1999). Naïve Ideas in Earth Science. MSTA Journal, 44(2) (Fall’99), pp.26-30. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Measurement is only linear.
- Any quantity can be measured as accurately as you want.
- Children who have used measuring devices at home already know how to measure.
- The metric system is more accurate than other measurement systems (such as the English system).
- The English system is easier to use than the metric system.
- You can only measure to the smallest unit shown on the measuring device.
- Some objects cannot be measured because of their size or inaccessibility.
- The five senses are infallible.
- An object must be “touched” to be measured.
- A measuring device must be a physical object.
- Mass and weight are the same and they are equal at all times.
- Mass and volume are the same.
- The only way to measure time is with a clock or a watch.
- Time has an absolute beginning.
- Heat and temperature are the same.
- Heat is a substance.
- Cold is the opposite of heat and is another substance.
- There is only one way to measure perimeter.
- Only the area of rectangular shapes can be measured in square units.
- Surface area can be found only for two-dimensional objects.
- Surface area is a concept used only for mathematics classes.
- You cannot measure the volume of some objects because they do not have “regular” lengths, widths, or heights.
- An object’s volume is greater in water than in air.
- The density of an object depends only on its volume.
- Density for a give volume is always the same.
- The density of two samples of the same substance with different volumes or shapes cannot be the same.
- The location of an object can be described by stating its distance from a given point, ignoring direction.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.
- Objects become positively charged because they have gained protons.
- Objects become positively charged because their electrons have been destroyed.
- All atoms are charged.
- Larger magnets are stronger than smaller magnets.
- Current flows from a battery (or other source of electricity) to a light bulb (or other item that consumes electricity), but not from the light bulb to the battery.
- current flows out of both terminals of a dry cell or both connections in an electrical outlet.
- Current flows around a complete circuit, but it is used u by objects like light bulbs so less current returns than leaves the source of the electricity.
- All the electrons that make up a electrical current are initially contained in the battery or generator that is the source of the electricity.
- Electricity is produced in the wall socket.
- Electrons change into light when a lamp is turned on.
- Wires are hollow like a water hose, and electrons move inside the hollow space.
- A larger battery will make a motor run faster or a bulb burn brighter.
- Pure water is a good conductor of electricity.
- Electricity from a dry cell will shock or hurt if it is touched.
- Insulation is used to keep electricity in the wire.
- All wires are insulated.,
- Birds can perch on bare wires without being hurt because birds have insulated feet.
- A charge object can only affect other charged objects.
- The electrostatic force between two charged objects in not affected by the distance between them.
- Gravitational forces are stronger than electrostatic forces.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.
- All metals are attracted to a magnet
- All silver colored items are attracted to a magnet.
- All magnets are made of iron.
- Larger magnets are stronger than smaller magnets.
- The magnetic and geographic poles of the earth are located at the same place.
- The magnetic pole of the earth in the northern hemisphere is a north pole, and the pole in the southern hemisphere is a south pole.
- Only magnets produce magnetic fields.
- A magnetic field is a pattern of lines (not a field of force) that surrounds a magnet.
- In a magnet, the magnetic field lines exist only outside the magnet.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.
- Ice cannot change temperature
- When the temperature of a boiling substance remains constant, something is “wrong.”
- The bubbles in boiling water contain “air,” Oxygen,” or “nothing,” rather than water vapor.
- All liquids boil at 100°C (212°F) and freeze at 0° C (32°F).
- Heat is a substance.
- Heat is not energy.
- Temperature is a property of a particular material or object (metal is naturally colder than plastic).
- The temperature of an object depends on its size.
- Heat and cold are different, rather than being opposite ends of continuum.
- Boiling is the maximum temperature a substance can reach.
- Objects of different temperatures which are in constant contact with each other, or in contact with air at a different temperature, do not necessarily move toward the same temperature.
- Heat only travels upward.
- Heat rises.
- The kinetic theory does really explain heat transfer. (It is recited, but not believed.)
- Objects which readily become ware (conductors of heat) do not readily become cold.
- All solids expand at the same rate.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1992). Finding a List of Science Misconceptions. MSTA Newsletter, 38(Winter’92), pp.11-14.
- Objects float in water because they’re “lighter” than water.
- Objects sink in water because they’re “heavier” than water.
- Mass, volume, weight, heaviness, size, and density may be perceived as equivalent.
- Wood floats and metal sinks.
- All objects containing air float.
- Liquids of high viscosity are also liquids with high density.
- Adhesion is the same a cohesion.
- Heating hair only makes it hotter.
- Pressure and force are synonymous.
- Pressure arises from moving fluids.
- Moving fluids contain higher pressure.
- Liquids rise in a straw because of “suction.”
- Fluid pressure only acts downward.
Hapkiewicz, A. (1999). Naïve Ideas in Earth Science. MSTA Journal, 44(2) (Fall’99), pp.26-30. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Air as a substance is not well understood. Air has negative weight or not weight.
- Days are shortest in winter.
- Water vapor is held or soaked up by the air.
- Humid air is “Heavier” than dry air.
- A vacuum or low pressure area “pulls” object into it.
- Wind speed is related to temperature of air - high speed means cold air and gentle or slow winds are warm.
- Acid rain, ozone depletion and greenhouse effect are thought to be caused by same things and produce the same changes in the environment.
- Air pollution is always caused by human activities.
- Rain water should be neutral in pH.
Berthelsen, B. (1999). Students Naïve Conceptions in Life Science. MSTA Journal, 44(1) (Spring’99), pp. 13-19. http://www.msta-mich.orgOrganization of Living Things:
- Plants, fungi, eggs and seeds are not living.
- Young children do not recognize tress as living although they understand that seedlings are alive.
- Only large land mammals are animals.
- Penguins and turtles are amphibians because they are both in and out of water.
- Whales, jellyfish, and starfish are all fish.
- Behavior and habitat are criteria for classification.
- Food is anything useful taken into the body including: water, minerals, carbon dioxide (plants), and sunlight.
- Students concept of digestion is often confused both in the route and the process.
- Digestion is the process that releases usable energy from food.
- Respiration is synonymous with breathing.
Berthelsen, B. (1999). Students Naïve Conceptions in Life Science. MSTA Journal, 44(1) (Spring’99), pp. 13-19. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Plants obtain their energy directly from the sun.
- Plants have multiple sources of food (heterotrophic as well as autotrophic).
- Carbon dioxide, water, and minerals are food.
- Plants feed by absorbing food through their roots.
- Plants use heat from the sun as a source of energy for photosynthesis
- Sunlight is a food.
- Sunlight is composed of molecules.
- Sunlight is “consumed” in photosynthesis.
- Plants absorb water through their leaves.
- Plants produce oxygen for our benefit.
Berthelsen, B. (1999). Students Naïve Conceptions in Life Science. MSTA Journal, 44(1) (Spring’99), pp. 13-19. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Students are unsure about the hierarchy of atoms, molecules and cells. Cells are described as the components of many things including carbohydrates and proteins
- Students have difficulty discriminating between cell division, enlargement and differentiation. They may believe that living things grow because their cells get larger. The role of cell differentiation in growth is poorly understood.
- Students think in terms of two kinds of cells - plant and animal.
Berthelsen, B. (1999). Students Naïve Conceptions in Life Science. MSTA Journal, 44(1) (Spring’99), pp. 13-19. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Stronger organisms have more energy.
- There are more herbivores because they have more offspring.
- A species high on the food web is a predator to everything below it.
- Energy accumulates in an ecosystem so that a top predator has all the energy from the organisms below it.
- Carnivores can exist in a plant free world if their prey reproduce enough.
- The food that is eaten and used as a source of energy is part of the good chain; food that is synthesized into the body of the eater is now food for the next level.
Berthelsen, B. (1999). Students Naïve Conceptions in Life Science. MSTA Journal, 44(1) (Spring’99), pp. 13-19. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Daughters inherit most of their characteristics from their mothers. Boys inherit most of their characteristics from their fathers.
- Variation between species is a result of adaptation to environment instead of inheritance.
- Sexual reproduction occurs in animals but not in plants.
- Students do not distinguish between sexual and asexual reproduction.
- Asexual reproduction produces weak offspring. Sexual reproduction produces superior offspring.
- Students believe that transmitted characteristics are acquired during the life time of the animal.
- Individuals can adapt to a changing environment. These adaptations are heritable.
- Students do not understand the relationship between DNA, genes, and chromosomes
- Students can apply chance and probability to assigned genetics problems, but not to human situations in families.
Berthelsen, B. (1999). Students Naïve Conceptions in Life Science. MSTA Journal, 44(1) (Spring’99), pp. 13-19. http://www.msta-mich.org
- Students have difficulty relating an individuals adaptation to environment with changes in species phenotypes over long period of time due to selection.
- Students believe that transmitted characteristics are acquired during the life time of the animal.
- Individuals can adapt to a changing environment. These adaptations are heritable.
Berthelsen, B. (1999). Students Naïve Conceptions in Life Science. MSTA Journal, 44(1) (Spring’99), pp. 13-19. http://www.msta-mich.org
Also see misconceptions for Light and Color and Vision
- Objects are seen because they are bathed in light.
- Light travels from the eyes to the object.
- We can see because light travels to your eyes and then from the eyes to the object.
- Light to both our eyes and the object. There is o link between the two.
- Light is not necessary to see since we can see a little in a dark room.
- We see because we look, it has nothing to do with light.
- We can hear because we concentrate on the source of the sound.
- There is no similarity between light and sound.