
Jianlan Wang
Texas Tech University
pedagogical content knowledge
questioning
assessment
learning assistants
pck
physics identity
high-stakes testing
high school physics
5
presentations
1
number of views
SHORT BIO
Dr. Jianlan Wang is an assistant professor in the college of education at Texas Tech University. Dr. Wang has a master’s degree in condensed matter physics and a doctoral degree in science education. He has rich experience in designing, implementing, and researching inquiry-based and argumentation-leveraged science units from Elementary to College. He has taught both lecture-based and inquiry-oriented physics courses in high school and college. His work involves reforming instructional methods courses for K-12 science teacher candidates and teaching or learning assistants at the college level. He is also interested in bridging the theory-practice gap in science or physics education. Dr. Wang is skilled in both qualitative and quantitative research methods. His research at Texas Tech University includes designing and evaluating theory-driven interventions to science teacher preparation, examining students’ reasoning (e.g., computational and causal reasoning) as leveraged by teacher practice (e.g., questioning), and building models of various kinds (e.g., hierarchical linear model) to connect educational reforms, teacher knowledge, teacher practice, and student performance.
Presentations

Development of a Likert-style assessment to assess learning assistants PCK-Q
Beth Thacker and 3 other authors

Development of an Instrument for Analysis of Student Assistants’ PCK-Q
Beth Thacker and 3 other authors

Development of an Instrument for Analysis of Student Assistants’ PCK-Q
Beth Thacker and 3 other authors

Measure student assistants’ PCK-Q in online settings during COVID pandemic
Jianlan Wang and 4 other authors

Examine high-school physics education driven by high stakes testing
Jianlan Wang