Reading for learning in the sciences

Image result for 0050037684

 

Reading for Learning in the Sciences (1984), from the Schools Council, was a source of practical help for teachers that was designed to promote more effective learning from the written word. The book covered the place of reading in science education, the distinctive nature of science texts and the range of reading and study activities which can be used to direct student learning. The book was one of the outcomes of a Schools Council Project Reading for Learning in the Secondary School that was based at Nottingham University from 1978 to1982.

Research findings

Research had shown that teachers in British secondary schools had comparatively little faith in the potential of reading as a useful aid to effective learning. Research had also shown that school students were failing to engage actively with the texts they were reading and believed that, so long as what they read was vaguely sensible and relevant, it would somehow be absorbed; if not, that was because they were too dim and there was nothing they can do about it.

Active reading

The Reading for Learning project was designed specifically to lead young learners away from exclusive reliance on receptive reading towards an appreciation of the need for reflective reading, together with an understanding of how to go about it. One of the keys to success was to provide a range of problem-tasks demanding a close and thoughtful study of text for their solution. Informally the authors called these DARTs: Directed Activities Related to Text. The second essential was to devise the lessons in such a way that students would be working together in groups. Properly conducted, the authors showed that such work could be purposive, instructive, collaborative, motivating, even exhilarating.

Contents

Introduction
1 The Place of Reading in Science Education
2 The Nature of Reading in Science: the Text and the Task
3 Towards Effective Reading in Science
4. Towards a Description of Variation in Science Texts
5. Examples of Text Types and Reading Activities in Science
Annotated Bibliography: From Practice to Theory
Appendix: Obtaining Permission to use Copyright Material

 

 

Show health and safety information

Please be aware that resources have been published on the website in the form that they were originally supplied. This means that procedures reflect general practice and standards applicable at the time resources were produced and cannot be assumed to be acceptable today. Website users are fully responsible for ensuring that any activity, including practical work, which they carry out is in accordance with current regulations related to health and safety and that an appropriate risk assessment has been carried out.

Subject(s)Science
Author(s)Florence Davies, Terry Greene
Age11-14, 14-16, 16-19
Published1984
Published by

Shelf referenceA 507.12 DAV
ISN/ISBN0050037684
Direct URLhttps://www.stem.org.uk/xfbu9

This is a physical resource. Come and visit the National STEM Learning Centre library to see it.

Find out more about the Centre