Journal Screenshot

International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences

Open Access Journal

ISSN: 2222-6990

Enhancing Ionic Compound Formulation: Assessing the Efficacy of 'Fit-Me-Ion' among Malaysian Secondary Students

Siti Khatijah Deraman, Hussein Hanibah, Nor Zakiah Nor Hashim, Siti Aishah Wahyul Anwar

http://dx.doi.org/10.6007/IJARBSS/v14-i5/21519

Open access

Using a quantitative case study design, the 'Fit-Me-Ion' to write the chemical formulae of ionic compounds was developed to identify the level of understanding of Malaysian secondary students by comparing the performance before and after utilizing ‘Fit-Me-Ion’ to write the chemical formulae of ionic compounds. The data was collected from a sample of thirty Form 4 (Grade 10) secondary school students residing in Bagan Serai, Perak. A series of identical questionnaires concerning the chemical formulas of the ionic compound were administered distinctly throughout the pre-test and post-test. An additional set of questionnaires was issued after the administration of the pre-test and post-test to ascertain the students' perspectives on the utilisation of 'Fit-Me-Ion'. The acquired data were analysed utilising version 25 of the Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS). According to the study's findings, the degree to which students see the use of 'Fit-Me-Ion' to compose the chemical formulae of ionic compounds favourably has been demonstrated. Additionally, a greater proportion of students demonstrate a moderate level of comprehension, as most of the students earned B grades on the post-test after employing 'Fit-Me-Ion'; nevertheless, students exhibited a progressive enhancement in their level of understanding in comparison to the pre-test. In addition, the results indicated a notable disparity in the performance of the tests before and after the implementation of 'Fit-Me-Ion' for formulating ionic compounds. It can be deduced that the students perceive this approach as enhancing their comprehension and efficacy when it comes to composing the chemical formulas of ionic compounds. The implementation of 'Fit-Me-Ion' as a pedagogical aid for Form Four students to compose the chemical formulas of ionic compounds is regarded as efficacious.

Ang, J. W. J., Ng, Y. N. A., & Liew, R. S. (2020). Physical and digital educational escape room for teaching chemical bonding. Journal of Chemical Education, 97(9), 2849-2856.
Damanhuri, M. I. M., Kumar, L. D. P., Borhan, M. T., Sani, S. S., & Taha, H. (2019). Evaluation of jigsaw puzzles in writing the chemical formula of ionic compounds among the 10th grade students. In Journal of Physics: Conference Series (Vol. 1156, No. 1, p. 012029). IOP Publishing.
Gilbert, B. C., Clapson, M. L., & Musgrove, A. (2020). ChemEscape, polymer chemistry: solving interactive puzzles featuring scaffolded learning to promote student understanding of polymers and structure–property relationships. Journal of Chemical Education, 97(11), 4055-4062.
Gupta, T. (2019). Game-based learning in chemistry: A game for chemical nomenclature. In Technology integration in chemistry education and research (TICER) (pp. 65-79). American Chemical Society.
Jamil, N. I., Ahmad, S. N. D., Ali, R., Mohamed, N., & Yaacob, N. A. (2016, November). XRace Game Board-An Early Analysis of an Interactive Learning Tool. In Proceedings: International Conference on Education (ICE 2016) (Vol. 14, p. 15).
Kavak, N., & Yamak, H. (2016). Picture chem: Playing a game to identify laboratory equipment items and describe their use. Journal of Chemical Education, 93(7), 1253-1255.
Knudtson, C. A. (2015). ChemKarta: A card game for teaching functional groups in undergraduate organic chemistry. Journal of Chemical Education, 92(9), 1514-1517.
Kurniawan, R. A., Kurniasih, D., & Jukardi, J. (2017, December). Board and card games for studying electrochemistry: Preliminary research and early design. In AIP Conference Proceedings (Vol. 1911, No. 1). AIP Publishing.
Lamar, M. F. (2020). Ionic Bonding Curriculum Unit: An Electrostatic Framework.
Nakatsuji, H., Nakashima, H., & Kurokawa, Y. I. (2018). Solving the Schrödinger equation of atoms and molecules: Chemical-formula theory, free-complement chemical-formula theory, and intermediate variational theory. The Journal of Chemical Physics, 149(11).
OpenStax. (2016). Molecular and Ionic Compounds. OpenStax. Chemistry 2e 2.6.
Palmer, Y. M. (2016). Student to scholar: Learning experiences of international students. Journal of international students, 6(1), 216-240.
Singhal, I., & Balaji, B. S. (2019). Creating atom representations using open-source, stackable 3D printed interlocking pieces with tactile features to support chemical equation writing for sighted and visually impaired students. Journal of Chemical Education, 97(1), 118-124.
Singhal, I., & Balaji, B. S. (2019). Creating atom representations using open-source, stackable 3D printed interlocking pieces with tactile features to support chemical equation writing for sighted and visually impaired students. Journal of Chemical Education, 97(1), 118-124.
Tsai, J. C., Chen, S. Y., Chang, C. Y., & Liu, S. Y. (2020). Element enterprise tycoon: Playing board games to learn chemistry in daily life. Education Sciences, 10(3), 48.
Yenikalayc?, N., Çelikler, D., & Aksan, Z. (2019). Ion Hunters: Playing a game to practice identifying anions and cations and writing their names and formulas. Journal of Chemical Education, 96(11), 2532-2534.

(Deramana et al., 2024)
Deramana, S. K., Hanibaha, H., Hashima, N. Z. N., & Anwarb, S. A. W. (2024). Enhancing Ionic Compound Formulation: Assessing the Efficacy of “Fit-Me-Ion” among Malaysian Secondary Students. International Journal of Academic Research in Business and Social Sciences, 14(5), 1433–1455.