Can dance enhance students’ understanding of physics? We carry out two distinct
experiments to test dance-based education: one involving the photoelectric effect and the
other involving gravitational waves. Both experiments showed dramatic results.
The photoelectric effect is the emission of electrons from matter illuminated by
light. The deep implications and straightforward calculations of photoelectric problems
as explained by Einstein make it a powerful tool for teaching he quantum postulate. The
photon model introduced by Einstein to explain this effect in 1905 conflicted with
Maxwell’s widely accepted theory of light. Their conflicting explanations exemplified
the inability of classical concepts such as waves and particles to describe quantum scale
objects such as light and electrons. Wave-particle duality became one of the fundamental
paradoxes embedded in the foundation of quantum mechanics, one of the truly
revolutionary ideas of the 20th century. Current educational studies are searching for ways
to illuminate for novices how the photon model succeeds where the classical model fails.
First, a dance performance was designed to address these learning goals. Subjects
were exposed to the dance (N=239), PowerPoint (N=45) or nothing (N=183) and then
tested for their understanding of the photoelectric effect. While both treatments fostered
significantly higher scores than the control (M=2.94/5), a Fishers LSD test showed that
participants who saw the dance (M=4.36) did significantly better than participants who
saw the PowerPoint (M=3.91), F(2, 462)=100.147 p=.036.
In a second experiment, pre/post-tests were administered to 166 participants who
viewed a dance lecture on gravitational waves. Mean scores improved significantly after
exposure to the dance lecture. Viewers achieved an average gain of D =0.51, which
is high compared to the values reported by Hake in traditional physics courses. The
results from both experiments strongly suggest that the use of dance in teaching physics
can increase physics teaching effectiveness beyond that of traditional methods such as
PowerPoint.
This thesis also explores the history of the photoelectric effect. In the dance
performance, as in most physics classes, we approach the physics in an ahistorical
manner and try to convey our current understanding of the underlying physics. However,
the historical path towards understanding the photoelectric effect is a complex one. We
trace how advances in theory and novel experiments shaped our understanding of this
fundamental effect