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An Evaluation of The Relationship between Spatial Skills and Creating a Free Body Diagram

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Conference

2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition

Location

Minneapolis, MN

Publication Date

August 23, 2022

Start Date

June 26, 2022

End Date

June 29, 2022

Conference Session

Statics Fanatics 2

Page Count

13

DOI

10.18260/1-2--41680

Permanent URL

https://peer.asee.org/41680

Download Count

527

Paper Authors

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Sheryl Sorby University of Cincinnati

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Gavin Duffy

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Gavin Duffy is a lecturer in the School of Electrical & Electronic Engineering, TU Dublin and coordinator of ‘SellSTEM’, a Doctoral Training Network funded under Marie Skłodowska-Curie Actions. Worth just over €4M, SellSTEM consists of 15 PhD students spread across 10 universities in Europe whose projects aim to raise spatial ability levels of children in Europe, especially girls, so they are better prepared for the cognitive demands of STEM learning. Gender is a major theme in SellSTEM given the male advantage in spatial ability and the persistent under-representation of women in STEM higher education and careers, a research topic that is highly relevant to both society and economy. Gavin spent a year as visiting scholar at Ohio State University in 2016/17 and collaborates with researchers in Europe, USA and Australia. He is also a member of CREATE, the STEM education research group at TU Dublin

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Divyang Soni University of Cincinnati

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Grace Panther University of Nebraska - Lincoln

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Grace Panther is an Assistant Professor at the University of Nebraska Lincoln. She has experience conducting workshops at engineering education conferences and has been a guest editor for a special issue of European Journal of Engineering Education on inclusive learning environments. Her research areas include spatial visualization, material development, faculty discourses on gender, and defining knowledge domains of students and practicing engineers.

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Abstract

Spatial visualization is the ability to imagine what an object looks like from various viewpoints or after the object has been rotated in space by some amount. Numerous studies have shown the link between spatial skills and success in engineering. But how do well-developed spatial skills contribute to engineering student success? In previous studies with elementary students, children with good spatial skills were able to create strategic sketches—sketches that accurately represented the problem and led to a correct answer. Poor visualizers drew non-strategic sketches—these were pictorial in style and did not lead to correct solutions. For example, when asked how many trees could be planted along a driveway that was 15 meters long if they were spaced every 5 meters, high visualizers drew a plan view of a line with an X spaced every 5 meters to arrive at the correct answer. Low visualizers drew a picture of a tree. In this paper, we report on a study to examine the link between spatial skills and the ability to solve problems from engineering mechanics. A total of 128 students from upper division engineering courses completed several tests of spatial skills and were also asked to solve 6 engineering mechanics problems. One of the six problems was merely to draw a free body diagram of a crane. In this paper, we examine the quality of the free body diagrams made by students to measure accuracy of the sketch, appropriateness of schematic representation and number and type of errors. How each of these factors relates to spatial ability will be reported along with examples of student work. This paper will illustrate the variation in approach to constructing free-body diagrams among students with low and high levels of spatial ability.

Sorby, S., & Duffy, G., & Soni, D., & Panther, G. (2022, August), An Evaluation of The Relationship between Spatial Skills and Creating a Free Body Diagram Paper presented at 2022 ASEE Annual Conference & Exposition, Minneapolis, MN. 10.18260/1-2--41680

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