Interpreting students' writings: misconception or misrepresentation?
Issue 349 | Page 109 | Published Jun 2013
Description
This article demonstrates one particular difficulty of interpreting students' use of language in science classrooms: determining whether a student's writing indicates a misconception or a misrepresentation. Students' written assignments from a case study are used to illustrate instances where multiple interpretations are possible. These examples indicate that teaching the language of school science is essential if students are to be well equipped to demonstrate their scientific knowledge.
More from this issue
Charles Darwin supposed that evolution involved a process of gradual change, generated randomly, with the selection and retention over many...
When CLEAPSS, the organisation now well known as a source of advice on health and safety in school science, came into being, it was called the...
African violet (genus Saintpaulia) was identified as a particularly suitable genus for the study of specialised plant cells in the classroom using...