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This paper reports an investigation into the procedural understanding of first‐year university science students at the University of Cape Town, South Africa. Written probes were used to explore ideas regarding the reliability of experimental data, in particular the need for repeating measurements and the implications of the spread associated with data. The types of reasoning underlying the responses are discussed. The findings suggest an extension of a recently proposed model of progression of understanding of empirical evidence. Equally, they show that the use of procedural understanding is context dependent, and that students' intuitive ideas about improving precision and accuracy of measurements are not distinct.
Allie et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
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