Vanes Mešić
University of Sarajevo
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Featured researches published by Vanes Mešić.
International Journal of Science Education | 2012
Vanes Mešić
In international large-scale assessments of educational outcomes, student achievement is often represented by unidimensional constructs. This approach allows for drawing general conclusions about country rankings with respect to the given achievement measure, but it typically does not provide specific diagnostic information which is necessary for systematic comparisons and improvements of educational systems. Useful information could be obtained by exploring the differences in national profiles of student achievement between low-achieving and high-achieving countries. In this study, we aimed to identify the relative weaknesses and strengths of eighth graders’ physics achievement in Bosnia and Herzegovina in comparison to the achievement of their peers from Slovenia. For this purpose, we ran a secondary analysis of Trends in International Mathematics and Science Study (TIMSS) 2007 data. The student sample consisted of 4,220 students from Bosnia and Herzegovina and 4,043 students from Slovenia. After analysing the cognitive demands of TIMSS 2007 physics items, the correspondent differential item functioning (DIF)/differential group functioning contrasts were estimated. Approximately 40% of items exhibited large DIF contrasts, indicating significant differences between cultures of physics education in Bosnia and Herzegovina and Slovenia. The relative strength of students from Bosnia and Herzegovina showed to be mainly associated with the topic area ‘Electricity and magnetism’. Classes of items which required the knowledge of experimental method, counterintuitive thinking, proportional reasoning and/or the use of complex knowledge structures proved to be differentially easier for students from Slovenia. In the light of the presented results, the common practice of ranking countries with respect to universally established cognitive categories seems to be potentially misleading.
The Physics Teacher | 2017
E. Hasović; Vanes Mešić; Nataša Erceg
In this paper we are going to show how learning about some counterintuitive aspects of rolling motion can be facilitated by combining the use of analogies with extreme case reasoning. Specifically, the intuitively comprehensible examples of “rolling” polygonal prisms are used as an analogical anchor that is supposed to help the students develop conceptual understanding about counterintuitive aspects of rolling motion.
Physical Review Special Topics-physics Education Research | 2011
Vanes Mešić; Hasnija Muratovic
Revista Mexicana De Fisica E | 2013
Nataša Erceg; Ivica Aviani; Vanes Mešić
Physical Review Special Topics-physics Education Research | 2015
Ivica Aviani; Nataša Erceg; Vanes Mešić
Canadian Journal of Physics | 2014
Nataša Erceg; Ivica Aviani; Vanes Mešić
Physical Review Special Topics-physics Education Research | 2016
Nataša Erceg; Ivica Aviani; Vanes Mešić; Matko Glunčić; Gordana Žauhar
Physical Review Physics Education Research | 2016
Vanes Mešić; Erna Hajder; Knut Neumann; Nataša Erceg
European Journal of Physics Education | 2016
Vanes Mešić; Sabaheta Mahmutovic; E. Hasović; Nataša Erceg
The 2nd South Eastern European Meeting on Physics Education (SEEMPE) 2015, Book of abstracts | 2015
Nataša Erceg; Ivica Aviani; Vanes Mešić; Zoran Kaliman; Dubravka Kotnik-Karuza