In recent years, science education research has stressed the importance of finding out what students already know before teaching a new topic. It is important to uncover alternative ideas that students may hold in order to provide suitable activities to challenge their current ideas and move them towards a more scientific view of the topic. Fortunately for teachers it appears that the vast majority of students hold a fairly limited range of alternative ideas about any one concept. Being aware of likely alternative ideas can help teachers plan effective science education programmes.
Common alternative ideas |
Science ideas |
Animals rely on people to obtain resources such as food and shelter. |
Within any given ecosystem, organisms are reliant on both the living and non-living components to meet their needs for food and shelter. |
Organisms can change what they eat, depending on what is available. |
Each species has unique needs. |
Carnivores are big and ferocious. Herbivores are passive or smaller. |
Feeding relationships are complex and link the organisms within an ecosystem. There are small carnivores (e.g., some insects) and big herbivores (e.g., elephants). |
Some living things do not have a role in nature especially those that don’t seem to do much (e.g., starfish) or those that are unpleasant (e.g., flies). |
Each species interacts with the rest of the ecosystem in unique ways. Everything has a role. |
Varying the population of one organism only affects others that are directly connected through a food chain. Varying the population of some organisms has no effect because some organisms are unimportant. |
Varying the population of one organism affects an entire ecosystem to some degree. |
Organisms higher in the food chain eat everything below them. |
Organisms higher in a food web feed on some organisms lower in the food web. |
Matter and energy can be created or destroyed. |
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Food chains involve predators and prey, no producers. |
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Plants get their food from outside (e.g., from the soil via their roots) rather than manufacturing it. |
Plants (producers) use energy from the sun to make food (photosynthesis). They get water and some nutrients via their roots. |
Things just rot away – no recognition of either the role of decomposers or energy and matter being transformed into something else. |
Decomposers (e.g., moulds, bacteria, worms) convert dead organisms into other materials in the environment such as soil minerals that are then used by plants. |
- CASES Unit Alternative Ideas – How do things live in my neighbourhood?
- Retrieved from the World Wide Web (2005, 19th April 2005): http://cases.soe.umich.edu/units.php?frame=unitaltid&dqid=130
- Overcoming Ecological Misconceptions.
- Retrieved, from the World Wide Web (2005, 19th April 2005): http://ecomisconceptions.binghamton.edu/foodwebs.php
- Palmer, D. (2003). Investigating the relationship between refutational text and conceptual change. Science Education, 87(5), 663-684.