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The use of extra-terrestrial oceans to test ocean acoustics students

The use of extra-terrestrial oceans to test ocean acoustics students
The use of extra-terrestrial oceans to test ocean acoustics students
The existence of extra-terrestrial oceans offers the opportunities to set examination questions for which students in underwater acoustics do not already know the answers. The limited set of scenarios in Earth’s oceans that can be presented to students as tractable examination questions means that, rather than properly assessing the individual scenario, students can rely on knowledge from previous examples in assessing, for example, which terms in equations are large and small, and what numerical values the answers are likely to take. The habit of adapting previous solutions with which the student is comfortable, to new scenarios, is not a safe approach to learn, as it ill equips the future scientist or engineer to identify and tackle problems which contain serious departures from their experience.
0001-4966
2551-2555
Leighton, T. G.
3e5262ce-1d7d-42eb-b013-fcc5c286bbae
Leighton, T. G.
3e5262ce-1d7d-42eb-b013-fcc5c286bbae

Leighton, T. G. (2012) The use of extra-terrestrial oceans to test ocean acoustics students. [in special issue: Part 2 Education in Acoustics] Journal of the Acoustical Society of America, 131 (3), 2551-2555. (doi:10.1121/1.3680540).

Record type: Article

Abstract

The existence of extra-terrestrial oceans offers the opportunities to set examination questions for which students in underwater acoustics do not already know the answers. The limited set of scenarios in Earth’s oceans that can be presented to students as tractable examination questions means that, rather than properly assessing the individual scenario, students can rely on knowledge from previous examples in assessing, for example, which terms in equations are large and small, and what numerical values the answers are likely to take. The habit of adapting previous solutions with which the student is comfortable, to new scenarios, is not a safe approach to learn, as it ill equips the future scientist or engineer to identify and tackle problems which contain serious departures from their experience.

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More information

Published date: March 2012
Organisations: Acoustics Group

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 336275
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/336275
ISSN: 0001-4966
PURE UUID: e775ec12-b499-496d-b4bb-897cf5783165
ORCID for T. G. Leighton: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-1649-8750

Catalogue record

Date deposited: 20 Mar 2012 16:32
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 02:45

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