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Education United States Science

A New Approach to Teaching Science 412

Gallenod writes "The Washington Post has an article on Joy Hakim, an author trying to re-write junior-high science textbooks to make them more readable. There are some interesting observations on how traditional textbook publishing houses control pretty much everything children read in school and her difficulties in challenging the status quo. However, she's already succeeded with an award-winning history textbook series, so maybe she'll rack up another win here."
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A New Approach to Teaching Science

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  • by Ignorant Aardvark ( 632408 ) <cydeweys@noSpAm.gmail.com> on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:02PM (#5540948) Homepage Journal
    Don't bother with textbooks - just teach them hands-on. I had 10X as much fun combining chemicals that gave off smoke than I ever did reading some dumb paragraphs.
    • by flewp ( 458359 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:06PM (#5540969)
      Indeed, hands on approaches are the best. However, I think there needs to be some written (ie, textbooks) references. In other words, hands on approaches need to compliment the written matierial. Perhaps do an experiment to get the students' attention, and then teach the why and how. I don't know about most people, but when I see something cool, I want to know the hows and whys.

      Although, back in high school I used to have the most fun combing combustion and chemicals to give off smoke.
    • by PIPBoy3000 ( 619296 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:14PM (#5541008)
      To a large degree, I think there's a lot of truth here. When I was doing my student teaching, they called me Mr. Explosion (due to an unfortunate science demonstration). I suspect they remembered far more about the strange demonstrations than what was read in the textbook.

      Keep in mind that different kids learn in different ways. Textbooks should just be one of the several methods in which information is passed along. Open discussion, reading, projects, and even the ubitiquous video all have their places.
    • by NOLAChief ( 646613 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:29PM (#5541094)
      Both yours and her's approach to learning I agree with as the best way for children to learn. Unfortunately the pressure cooker our schools are under to make kids pass high stakes assessment tests (the LEAP here in Louisiana, the CSAP in Colorado, etc. etc.) pretty much requires that teachers stuff as many facts, however disjointed, into kids heads so that they can regurgitate them come test day. Until this nonsense changes, I fear she'll have trouble getting her approach off the ground. I wish her luck though!
    • by reverseengineer ( 580922 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:12PM (#5541328)
      I totally agree. I was lucky enough to have science teachers in junior high and high school who emphasized hands-on learning. Textbooks can be a valuable resource, but they can't be used as a crutch. In most of my classes, textbooks were used to assign homework and practice problems, but the teaching was done by the teacher.

      Of course, I think my teachers' decisions to not make much use of textbooks stemmed in part from the texts sucking pretty hard. Given their current state as a mishmash of facts written by committee, I'd say teaching science from only a middle-school science text would be like teaching English using only a dictionary. The facts are all present and accounted for, but the presentation is a bit dry. Personally, I think Joy Hakim's overhaul sounds like an excellent idea- there are some fascinating stories in science, and I think that they could greatly enrich the material.

      A careful balance has to be struck, however, between these "stories" and academic rigor. On the one hand, I would argue that learning about how learning how Newton and Leibniz hated each other, for example, is not as important as learning about their independent discovery of the calculus. Any changes made to middle school science must keep in mind that some of the students passing through middle school will become our nation's next generation of scientists. I don't want to see kids get three years of touchy-feely science "stories" with no real science and then go on to get overrun in high school and college when they take hardcore "real" science courses. On the other hand, I had the honor of meeting distinguished physicist and Nobel laureate Leon Lederman acoupke weeks ago- he gave a talk about his efforts to reform science education at the high school level, actually- and he said something that made a lot of sense. He pointed out that the scientific way of thinking would certainly be a good thing for all citizens to have- it promotes a very healthy sense of skepticism. Thus, any attempt to modify science education must walk a fine line, catering to both future scientists and every other student. While I am a proponent of rigor in science education, I think it would be a damn shame to turn off otherwise bright, eager students from the joys of science on account of a boring textbook. We have to encourage the few, but in a modern world surrounded by science, we can't afford to alienate the many.
    • "Don't bother with textbooks - just teach them hands-on. I had 10X as much fun combining chemicals that gave off smoke than I ever did reading some dumb paragraphs."

      Says you. I lost a rather expensive TI calculator due to a former friend of mine playing with chemicals that created smoke. My dad wouldn't replace it because he thought I should have been a human shield.
      • Good for you and your dad. Having a calculator makes kids dumber anyway. And no, I'm not a troll, I'm just a foreign-educated guy who is persuaded calculators are detrimental to high school education.
    • Jacob's ladder (Score:3, Interesting)

      In high school we were doing some experiment in groups, spinning a cork on the end of string, with the string going through a tube and a weight on the bottom, to demonstrate centipetal force. I forget exactly what the exercise was, but it wasn't terribly interesting and everyone was just screwing around. I got bored and started checking out what was in the cabinets along the wall.

      When the teacher wasn't looking, I pulled out a high voltage transformer and a few bits of heavy wire. I hadn't done this before
  • I want (Score:3, Insightful)

    by flewp ( 458359 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:02PM (#5540949)
    textbooks that are written kind of like A Brief History of Time or other such books. Of course, they'd need to have to be more indepth and whatnot, but if ideas and concepts were introduced in a more entertaining and inviting way, people would be more interested in learning the details. I did not read the article btw, I don't feel like registering.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:24PM (#5541057)
      damnit already, quit allowing the state government dictate what textbooks to buy each year.

      I am sure that many many lawmakers would like to contract out their printing of free open content books instead of paying $10 - $15 each for whatever the book publishers want to sell.

      I think D-Day, Omaha Beach, and WW2 deserver more than 3 pages in a US history text book.

      Seneca Falls women's rights meeting does not deserve the 15 or so mentions it gets in US history books. I would suggest something a little more significant like how everybody gets their rights by being alive and not from a king or government as expressed in the Declaration of Independence.

      • by unicron ( 20286 ) <unicron AT thcnet DOT net> on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:42PM (#5541190) Homepage
        I'm gonna say that the Seneca Falls women's right meeting getting 15 pages is a little exaggerated. If your mother is their secretary..then I probably have it figured out.

        WW2 definately deserve more than 3 pages, but not 3+ pages per battle. Get a book on the history of WW2 if you want that.

        As for highschool kids, you guys got it easy. Wait until college when the guy teaching you wrote the book. When I was in college freshman year, my chem 101 teacher actually wrote the textbook..and it was some POS book, it was the nationwide standard for that course..a fact he never failed to mention at least once a week...I half-expected him to pull his wang out and wave it around like a sword whenever he mentioned it.
  • post your manuscripts on the web. at least one will become popular.
  • Rewriting? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Decimal ( 154606 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:05PM (#5540966) Homepage Journal
    They're rewriting history books? Dammit, now I'll have to re-learn all sorts of things, like who won World War II!
    • Re:Rewriting? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Skyshadow ( 508 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:31PM (#5541108) Homepage
      They're rewriting history books? Dammit, now I'll have to re-learn all sorts of things, like who won World War II!

      Disclaimer: IAAH (I am a Historian).

      There isn't a "right" way to view history; it's simplistic to think that there is. History is always necessarily the interpretation of data through our modern worldview and understanding, and as such it's appropriate to constantly reevaluate what we know of history.

      Of course, there are dates and places and people in history, but the "hard facts" aren't generally important. Just knowing *what* happened doesn't really buy you anything -- it's just trivia. The *why* is what really counts, what really leads us to some understanding of history, and that's rightly always open to interpretation.

    • by Guppy06 ( 410832 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:12PM (#5541324)
      Could be worse. You could be trying to learn European geography during the late 80's and early 90's.
    • Newton Has Two Mommies
    • Are You There, Mr. Feynman? It's Me, Margaret.
    • Harry Potter and the Erlenmayer Flask of Doom
  • by CheshireCatCO ( 185193 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:07PM (#5540974) Homepage
    The article claims that textbooks at the K-12 level are usually written by committees. This is probably true, based on my limited recollections. So why is this so very different from college textbooks, which are usually written by a small number of authors? (Usually, there are one, two or at most, three.)

    There must be some driving force that makes the committee system work better for the K-12 textbooks, but what is it, I wonder?
    • There must be some driving force that makes the committee system work better for the K-12 textbooks, but what is it, I wonder?

      Why, it's 10,000 monkies at 10,000 typewriters!
    • by Jason1729 ( 561790 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:13PM (#5540999)
      College textbooks are choosen for the class by the professor who has expertise in the area. K-12 books are choosen school or district-wide by committees.

      Jason
      ProfQuotes [profquotes.com]
      • by ArmyOfFun ( 652320 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:44PM (#5541203)
        In addition to this, it's apparently pretty difficult to make a profit on k-12 textbooks, and the toughest committees for passing/buying a book are in Texas. To avoid differing versions, costly rewrites and so on, most publishers give their books to a few select committees in Texas (and California) for approval and only if they pass there do they go on to the rest of the country.

        It's not as local a decision as you may think. Well, unless you live in Texas or California. But you don't have to take my word for it [corporatemofo.com].
    • Politics. At the college level, individual professors decide what books to assign; in many cases if there isn't a decent text, the professor has a strong incentive (the tenure system, royalties, reputation, etc) to write his/her own. For K-12, teachers have no such power; committees make the decisions, and it's far worse if the book offends someone than if it is merely boring. So, as a result, K-12 texts are almost always boring.

    • by Squeamish Ossifrage ( 3451 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:29PM (#5541089) Homepage Journal
      I suspect that college-level textbooks don't get written by committee for several reasons, but here's my main guess: They're not being written for a committee, either.

      Since an individual professor selects the text for his or her course, the texts don't have to be written to satisfy the varied and mutually contradictory demands of an approval committee. That, and most of my textbooks are on a narrower subject area than "Science."
    • by gilroy ( 155262 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @11:07PM (#5541622) Homepage Journal
      Blockquoth the poster:

      So why is this so very different from college textbooks

      Don't delude yourself. A lot of college textbooks are crap, too. The main difference seems to be that there is an actual market in college books -- bad ones can sink quickly and good ones get established. Is it because only a few people write them? No. It's because use of a given text generally depends only on one person -- the prof teaching the course. If a books sucks (and the prof cares), then it drops from the required list. If enough profs agree it sucks -- even if they never talk to one another -- the book vanishes because no one buys it.


      On the other hand, at lower levels, books are bought once every n years, with n usually 5 or more. So a bad textbook sticks around. Teachers get used to using it, aligning their plans with it, pacing by it, etc. So when time comes to change, they're often antsy about it. And of course, the decision is not made by the teacher at all (esp. in public school) but by yet a different committee for the whole state.


      Hmmmm. Individual profs choosing --> individual authors --> better books. Committee of educators choosings --> committe of writers --> bad books. Maybe it's just a case of a species protecting its own. :)

  • Students. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Daleks ( 226923 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:08PM (#5540979)
    How about we take a new approach to having students actually give a rat's ass about science or learning in general? The problem isn't textbooks or any 'style' of teaching. It's students who come to school who simply don't care. Why is there the steroetype about smart asian kids? It's because societies like those in South Korea and India place a high value on intelligence and education, ours (America) doesn't.
    • Re:Students. (Score:4, Interesting)

      by hobbesmaster ( 592205 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:15PM (#5541023)
      Then perhaps our the teachers/text books should try to use parts of our society in their lesson plans/text.

      For instance, in physics class you could start off talking about how wrong most everything out of hollywood is...
    • Re:Students. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by myc ( 105406 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:16PM (#5541026)
      wow. mod up parent, couldn't have said it better myself. There is a serious problem in this country where "being smart" is looked down upon, especially at the junior high-high school level.

      Having said that, I think that while a large part of the problem lies with the student's attitudes, an equally large part of the problem also lies with the curriculum. US High school textbooks are, in general woefully inadequate when compared to science textbooks from other developed nations. The SAT exam, particularly the portions pertaining to math and logic, are usually at a junior high level in most Asian countries, for instance (from where I hail from). Its hard for students to take their studies seriously when they are not learning anything serious. JMHO.
      • Re:Students. (Score:3, Insightful)

        by sconeu ( 64226 )
        High school textbooks are, in general woefully inadequate when compared to science textbooks from other developed nations

        See Feynman's rant from "What do you care what other people think?"
    • NO! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by garcia ( 6573 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:18PM (#5541035)
      Ok, this is something I am really sick and tired of hearing... Are you a teacher?

      I just spoke w/a group of professors who complained that students aren't willing to learn anymore...

      1. School is forced (especially college, which has become a *necessary* extension of High School).

      2. Teachers teach passively yet expect students to be active learners. Putting an overhead on the screen or a PPT presentation DOES NOT COUNT as active teaching. It causes people to become uninterested and bored.

      Once teachers start teaching actively, students will probably learn actively. Until that time, it is just as much the fault of the educators.
      • Re:NO! (Score:4, Interesting)

        by zaffir ( 546764 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:20PM (#5541384)
        I agree with you 100%.

        First, we have to get up damn early - at least in highschool - to go to a place we don't even like (see reasons below). Google for info on teen's sleep patterns, and you'll see that waking at 6:00 or 6:30 AM is a BAD THING for people my age. The fix? Change when we start. Why hasn't my school done this? "It would mess up the sports schedules." Yay, athletics over education. Not that team sports are bad - i think they're great for students - but come on, what's really more important? Hell, let the athletes out of school early if you want.

        When we get to school, we get to look forward to 6 or 7 periods of different subjects. It can be very, very hard to be extremely involved in something - a problem, reading, etc. - and have the bell ring, signaling that you get to go to another class. Switching from CompSci to Humanities to Government is pretty rough. Admittedly, block scheduling aims to fix this, but then we can get stuck with a teacher who just drones on for the whole 2 hours instead of the usual one. The fix? Block scheduling with teachers that can actually TEACH.

        And finally, I would enjoy school 100 times more if I didn't have 2-3 hours of homework every night. 20-30 minutes of homework from one teacher doesn't seem like that much, but when I have 6 or 7 teachers all assigning that much, it takes alot of time. Teach the fucking class, don't make me copy answers out of my book. /rant
      • Re:NO! (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Goldsmith ( 561202 )
        I just finished teaching a electronics lab class which was *very* active. My students appreciated the effort I went through in class to get them to understand the material, and I would say that many of them took a more active approach to learning due to it.

        That's not to say there weren't problems. There were two things the students had to do before lab. The first was to read the lab for the week, the second was to submit some online answers to selected prelab questions. I would say 75% of my students d
      • Re:NO! (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Daleks ( 226923 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @11:57PM (#5541855)
        Ok, this is something I am really sick and tired of hearing... Are you a teacher?

        Nope. I was a TA in college though.

        I just spoke w/a group of professors who complained that students aren't willing to learn anymore...

        There is always going to be some degree of animosity between students and teachers. There will always be some students who say soandso is a horrible teacher, and there will always be some teachers who say their students are spoiled brats. Teachers share some of the blame, but if you've recently seen the behavior of classrooms firsthand, you'd be appalled.

        1. School is forced (especially college, which has become a *necessary* extension of High School).

        What does this have to do with anything? Should children be allowed to sit at home all day and play video games because they think Math is hard? Also, you can go to a trade school after high school and get a job that way. If you don't like the job you get, well, then you should've gone to college.

        You can try to say that schools don't teach you anything that you'll use in the 'real' world, but that simply isn't true. Now more than ever high schools offer applied programs. Auto repair, programming, and hell probably even carpentry if you ask your wood shop teacher nicely. Last June I was offered a position to teach at a vocational school that had a program for high school students to learn programming as it applied to game development. This wasn't for a rich and privaleged school either.

        2. Teachers teach passively yet expect students to be active learners. Putting an overhead on the screen or a PPT presentation DOES NOT COUNT as active teaching.

        Even if a teacher does his or her job poorly, this doesn't mean a student is completely absolved from having to understand the coursework. If a teacher gives a poor lecture about WW2, does that mean the student gets to blame the teacher for his or her lack of understanding? No. While a teacher does play a central role in a course, it is still the responsibility of the student to make every effort to learn. With a proper respect for knowledge a student will understand the material is more important than judging the teacher or even the grade they receive. This isn't to say that grades are irrelevant, but that a personal understanding of the value of knowledge is more important than having a high GPA. I'm not advocating throwing grades out the window. I'm advocating the driving force in the learning process for a student should be knowledge, not letters on a report card or classroom dynamics.

        With that said, I agree that a bad teacher will obviously have a negative effect on the learning process. Teachers should be held accountable for their actions. I've had my share of bad teachers, but I realized that the classes were about me, not them. I understood that it was my future at stake, not theirs.

        It causes people to become uninterested and bored.

        This is something I hear all the time, and sorry, I just don't buy it. If a student is unmotivated to take an active role in their own future, then it is their own fault. A teacher shouldn't be required to turn Physics into song and dance to get the student's attention. School is hard and not always fun. More is at stake for the student than for the teacher. School for a teacher is their profession. School for a student is their entire future.

        Once teachers start teaching actively, students will probably learn actively. Until that time, it is just as much the fault of the educators.

        We obviously disagree on the distribution of 'blame' students and teachers share in the current educational system. Granted there are many, many bad teachers out there, but the students need to understand how to look beyond that. School is about learning new ideas, not a pissing contest with a teacher that supposedly has it out for you.
    • Re:Students. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Quantum Skyline ( 600872 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:25PM (#5541067)
      Mod parent up. I couldn't have said it better myself.

      There is too much emphasis on trying to make science "hip" and "cool" and to a certain extent, "l33t". This seems to work for a bit but ensures a kid's attention span is short.

      Want kids to do better in school? Turn off the TV. Do homework as a family. Don't buy another console (I know a few people who have a few consoles.) Teachers need to care too. And lets face it, most role models for kids (Britney Spears, almost any rapper) suck as role models. All they really portray is that you can make money dropping out of school or almost never going. To put it simply, kill the distractions. Explain in no uncertain terms that you need to care in school in order to do something in life.

      Best influence on my life is my father. He taught me to do math at a grade 1 level when I was in junior kindergarten, and moved up. He encouraged me to do math beyond his comprehension and offered to help, even if he didn't know what an integral is.

      That's what Western (not just American) families need - a return to the fundamentals instead of a focus on becoming the next American Idol.
    • Re:Students. (Score:3, Insightful)

      by km790816 ( 78280 )
      Maybe it's because our system treats children as something to be processed and measured.

      "We don't care if you really learn this as long as you can remember it long enough to pass a standardized test that really doesn't measure what you've really gained."

      Students share some of the blame. Parents, goverment, textbook publishers, and teachers are also to blame.

      A great teacher can make almost anyone want to learn, but a shitty teacher can suck the motivation out of almost anyone.
      • Re:Students. (Score:3, Insightful)

        by hazem ( 472289 )
        A great teacher can make almost anyone want to learn, but a shitty teacher can suck the motivation out of almost anyone.

        Yes, and the teachers' unions prevent you from firing the shitty teacher, and prevent you from paying the great teacher what they're worth.

        This, IMHO, is one of the greatest problems in education. You can't reward those teachers who excel and do a good job, and you can't punish those who don't - everyone's the same. So, what motivation is there to improve? What if you're that shitty
    • Re:Students. (Score:5, Insightful)

      by machine of god ( 569301 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:42PM (#5541191)
      Why is there the steroetype about smart asian kids?

      I always thought it was because only the smartest got to come here.

      • Re:Students. (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Rinikusu ( 28164 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @11:13PM (#5541657)
        Umm.. no?

        I mean, I'm 1st generation native born Asian-American. My mother is Korean, my father is Native American, but that's besides the point. The point is that every other half/whole korean kid I know with a Korean mother is in fear of our lives about our grades in school. If I came home with anything below a B, I would get beaten within an inch of my life. My mom cared about my grades, it reflected upon her. Through the threat of beatings, I then cared about my grades. Granted, I got straight A's until the 10th grade, but the idea is still there: Get beat, get good grades..

        Um, no wait that's not it...

        When parents give a shit about their kids and what they learn in school, then the kids tend to do better, especially if the parents take an active role in their education. You don't necessarily have to beat them up (Hey, I fucking turned out great, and I'll beat the shit out of anyone that says otherwise), but knowing how to provide incentives and make education, well, worth learning, makes a ton of difference.

    • Re:Students. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by mlknowle ( 175506 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:25PM (#5541413) Homepage Journal
      Bullshit.

      All or most of the asian kids around you are smart and dedicated? Wow! But do you think that that is a representative sample of Asians, or some Asians who are particularly smart and dedicated happen to have left their country to study abroad? Groups self select; you don't seem like a very bright person, but at the highest levels everyone is smart. The reason the smartest people around you are Asians is because American's who are smarter than you have had more opportunity to go elsewhere.

      If you look at world-wide test scores, you'll see that America ranks well down the list; why? Because America educates (and therefore tests) a much larger range of the bell curve than many other countries do. For this reason, our 'average' score is indeed lower, but if you did total score divided by the entire (not just test taking) population, you would see different results.
    • Re:Students. (Score:4, Insightful)

      by arvindn ( 542080 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:58PM (#5541576) Homepage Journal
      I'm from India. I've got a couple of observations.

      You're right about the problem not being with textbooks. The textbooks here are as dull if not duller than anywhere else. But smart is sexy over here. There's a lot of motivation for students to learn. And there's the economic incentive, too. Very hard to get a job that pays enough.

      That's not the whole picture, though. There are government schools and private schools. What I said above goes for the private schools. In the government schools kids go there because they have to.

      Then why the stereotype about smart Asian kids? Simple. The smarter kids get a job/fellowship in the U.S and migrate there, which is the only section you see.

  • Science books (Score:5, Insightful)

    by zzxc ( 635106 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:09PM (#5540980)
    I was looking at a junior high science book recently. Everything seemed very dumbed down already. It was basically memory - not enough emphasis was placed on understanding concepts. Making them easier to read does not solve the real problem of students not understanding concepts.
    • Re:Science books (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Skyshadow ( 508 )
      I was looking at a junior high science book recently. Everything seemed very dumbed down already.

      I'm going to go out on a limb and assume that you're either in college or a college grad...

      ...in which case, finding a junior high textbook "dumbed down" really doesn't mean that (a) it's below par or (b) that you're a supergenious.

      There are some disciplines where you have to walk before you crawl -- for example, aren't Newton's Laws just a dumbed-down version of Einstein? Yet we teach them because they w

    • Re:Science books (Score:4, Informative)

      by JoeBuck ( 7947 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:29PM (#5541086) Homepage

      She wasn't talking about making them easier to read. By making it a narrative, the student sees the process of science, the adventure of figuring out what was formerly unknown, and is more likely to get an understanding of how things fit together than if she is just asked to memorize a series of facts.

  • by rabiteman ( 585341 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:09PM (#5540982) Homepage
    ...from the article:

    Books are written by committees. They have no literary merit, no voice, no style, no charm. They are focused almost exclusively on facts...

    Is it just me, or is an almost-exclusive focus on facts a good thing for textbooks of any sort? Would people prefer books based on rampant speculations, unwarranted assumptions, and outright lies?

    • by Jonathan ( 5011 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:21PM (#5541048) Homepage
      Is it just me, or is an almost-exclusive focus on facts a good thing for textbooks of any sort?

      The point is an anecdote or two livens things up. Would any one remember who discovered of the structure of benzine or how if they hadn't heard about Kekulé's weird dream of a snake eating its own tail? (And yes, I know most cynical chemists think that Kekulé was just BS-ing about the dream -- that's not the point)
    • Not to mention that "easier to read" almost inevitably means "more text". Which means spending more time reading the same material.

      I'm encountering more and more situations where I'm basically thinking "goddamnit, give me a function reference and I'll understand this in an hour, don't make me read this bullshit for weeks"*. It's bothering the hell out of me.

      The other option, "equal amount of text, less information" is just unthinkable...

      *I'm not talking about programming.

    • by JoeBuck ( 7947 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:37PM (#5541155) Homepage

      Facts aren't the whole story of science; you find this out if you work with grad students at a good research university. At some point in graduate school, the student is expected to make a transition between being an excellent test-taker to being able to produce something new, and many alleged-brilliant students don't successfully make the transition (though they usually successfully get out with master's degrees, and no, this is not a slam against people whose highest degree is MS). They're great at doing algebraic manipulation to get the homework right, and they have excellent memories, but they don't really grasp how things fit together. They are the ones who always try to get the TAs to give them enough hints to turn the word problem into an equation, so that they can get the answer without understanding the concept. They always got ahead by spitting back the answers the prof wanted, and have trouble shifting to finding out things that the prof does not know, or evaluating what is likely to be true when the question is unsettled.

      It's more important for students to understand the scientific method and critical thinking than to just memorize a lot of apparently unrelated facts.

  • Hope it works (Score:4, Insightful)

    by WatertonMan ( 550706 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:10PM (#5540987)
    I hope she does a good job. I can't speak having never seen her texts. The one big problem most science and math textbooks have is that they tend to teach subtly wrong things. The so called "New Math" movement from when I was a kid was a great example. The analogies and examples were often misleading and arose out of a misunderstanding of set theory or how scientists actually utilize mathematics.

    It seems like every couple of years we get a new set of "reforms." Every time I check out the textbooks they are almost uniformly horrible. The biggest error (other than teaching incorrect notions) is that they push too general an idea rather than trying to give kids the skills and critical thinking. I guess its time for an other round. . .

    • I've heard raves about her American history series ("A History of US").

      Still, reading this article, there doesn't seem to be any hard (or soft, for that matter) evidence that her displacment of facts with narrative results in students actually learning anything normally considered useful.

      • Re:Hope it works (Score:3, Interesting)

        by WatertonMan ( 550706 )
        That's what worries me. If she has done a set of history texts I suspect her background is the humanities and not the sciences. While I can't say for sure, I wouldn't be surprised to find that many of the errors in science texts is because of folks from the humanities being in charge.

        Don't get me wrong. It is important to be able to teach some semblance to science to those not naturally inclined towards the sciences. Yet there is a fundamentally different way of thinking in the sciences from most of

  • A nice idea.. but.. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by windows ( 452268 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:10PM (#5540988)
    First of all, I agree that publishing houses suck. I know the context of this article relates to middle school, but textbook publishers are lousy at all levels.

    As a college student, I get frustrated with math textbooks that present few examples, a lot of derivations, and problems that don't necessarily follow the examples. It's rather difficult to learn from that. If I'm stuck on a homework problem, I'm pretty much screwed no matter how many times I go back and read it. There's also an attempt to ruin the used book business by publishing minor revisions with different problems every couple of years. As a victim of this, I'm all for anything that opposes the large publishing houses.

    It's an interesting way to teach science, and the approach sounds a lot like reading A Brief History of Time, by Stephen Hawking. I learned a lot from that book that I certainly would never have picked up from a classic textbook. It's a good idea.

    I'd also like to add a suggestion. In a lot of schools, textbooks are being replaced with CDs containing the text. It's a nice idea, but I think a combination of both is the best idea. Consider a book that has the text, PDF files on a CD, and interactive examples or at least videos to supplement the text. It seems like a good way to learn, especially for the audience these books are intended, that being middle school.
  • by GeneralEmergency ( 240687 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:12PM (#5540994) Journal
    .
    ...is all k-12 text books and supporting materials (worksheets, lesson plans, etc.) produced under an open source licence so we, the taxpayers of this nation, can give these publishing houses the collective finger, and to make this material available to the world freely.

    This work could be all be done collectively by the nations teachers themselves, just like this good woman has done. This idea just needs a Corporate Sponsor or two to host the server space and bandwidth.
    • I've had some success with textbooks [lightandmatter.com] published under something like the model you're talking about. They're college-level books, but it turns out I sell more to high schools than to colleges. They're free-as-in-beer, and some are also open-source and copylefted. I sell them in print for about what it would cost to laser-print your own copy.

      See my sig for more examples from other authors and in other fields. Green Tea Press [greenteapress.com] sells open-source CS books, and I think some of their sales are to high schools.

  • by charon_on_acheron ( 519983 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:12PM (#5540998) Homepage
    Just start the text books by explaining how science fiction has had many ideas that were later 'invented' by scientists.

    Pulp scifi in the 1920's talked about ray guns, which all the established scientists ignored, knowing they were impossible. Now we have lasers.

    Rocket ships. Same story.

    As anyone who read much of Robert A. Heinlein's work knows, he wrote about a bed made out of a soft bladder filled with water. Now waterbeds are taken for granted.

    Those people also read about all the beautiful and sexy women in the 'average' scientist's life. Nowadays we have breast implants, nose jobs, face lifts, liposuction, and every other procedure needed to make that a reality.

    Finally, every male character, no matter their age, could please all those women all night. Viola, Viagra.

    See how interesting they could make science if they really tried?
    • by Scorchio ( 177053 ) on Wednesday March 19, 2003 @08:10AM (#5543183)
      Most of us have one or more lasers lying around the house, only they're today's replacement for the gramophone needle, and not for atomizing our enemies at a press of a trigger.

      Extrapolating from this, I predict that in another hundred years, warp drive engines will enable us to build new, faster and more efficient washing machines.
  • If I remember from my own experiences in public school, the current biggest problem with textbooks is the lack of photographs of beautiful, naked women.

  • If making the books more readable is not another "code" word for dumbing down the subject then I am for it. I am going through junior high science on my fourth pass now.

    No, not what you think I'm helping my third daughter through it, not that #3 needs much help. The books aren't too bad, but the schools spend too much time on none academic subjects, and not on English, Science, History, and Math.

  • by bluGill ( 862 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:15PM (#5541017)

    I'll agree that a simple reading of a science text book is boring. However you shouldn't be reading it like some novel. Your read it to learn about science. So you skim a couple pages, then get the components and mix up an expiriment.

    Sure you con't do every experiment to learn about it, but you need a grounding first. (Anyone care to tell me how to prove H has 1 electron, 1 proton, and no neutrons, without equipement byond what a science classrom could afford) Sure the story of Tesla and Ben Franklin might be more interesting, but their bio will not help you understand electrisity. Doing expiriemtns will. Reading about Ohm's law, and the other basics of the Science will.

    Science is about how and why things work, and the process of finding out. Science is not about enertainment, other than the enertainment of a hands on expiriemnt, or hands on solving some difficult math. (it is exciting to solve a complex math problem after spending several full days thinking about it, most people have never experienced it though)

    I'm not completely against these books. If they really help teach science great. However the joke about modern teaching where it doesn't matter if the kid says 2+2=2, so long as the kid tried hard the kid gets all the points is a concern. Science is fun, but a new textbook is not the answer. The answer is in teachers who understand science (not teaching, there is a BIG difference, though understanding teaching is important too) and can show the kids how to do it. Somehow, I'm not a teacher because I can't do it.

    • I get what your saying, but don't throw the baby out with the bathwater.

      I know that I have learned, and retained for many years, factoids that were surrounded by context and additional meaning. These are facts that i definitly wouldn't remember otherwise considering that i never use them. I still remember that summation equation because of the story that my high school math teacher told us, about how a the guy (i forget his name) figured it out because, as he was acting up in grade school, the teacher tol
    • ...understand electrisity. Doing expiriemtns will...
      ...other than the enertainment of a hands on expiriemnt...
      Somehow, I'm not a teacher because I can't do it.

      But anyway, I know some good spelling books you can get if you want to become a teacher ;)
    • by sstory ( 538486 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:15PM (#5541348) Homepage
      It's really not supposed to be FACTS. Science education is not primarily concerned with transmitting facts. Science is both a structure and a method. The great structures in science are the theories. Gravity. Atoms. Thermo. Maxwell's eqns. Relativity. etc. Facts are merely pieces of data used to test theory. The method, the process of beginning with a blank slate, collecting evidence, forming theory, testing extensions of the theory against evidence, is the embodiment of rationalism itself. It's the unique tool for generating knowledge. That, is what science education is about.
  • by Nathdot ( 465087 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:19PM (#5541041)
    In today's lesson we'll be looking at the process of Beverage Carbonation. In other words, how delicious bubbles are put into your favorite Dr.Pepper's drinks.

    Remember this is all assessable material, in addition to "what makes Hershey's chocolate bars taste so good".
  • by targo ( 409974 ) <targo_t&hotmail,com> on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:21PM (#5541050) Homepage
    When I look at my dad's old math textbooks, they are usually much dryer and "harder" to read than most of today's textbooks, which are loaded with colorful pictures and silly examples to make them more "child-friendly" instead of being concise and to-the-point.
    As a result, it is very hard to find the point from all the fluff-talk, and next to impossible to create a good systematic understanding of the topic. With these books, children don't take science seriously, and the result is much worse.
    In the recent 50 years or so, there's a very visible trend where textbooks get prettier, topics get more lightweight, school gets to be more "fun" instead of education, and the result (people's knowledge of science) gets worse and worse.
    We need to finally understand that we can't teach more/better by making the books easier and easier.
  • ...presented in textbooks. Like the definition of energy as "the ability to do work". It's just plain silly. I might as well argue that money is energy because I can use it to pay people to push against forces. It's not even approximately right. In order to convey what, exactly, this is supposed to mean, you need to do quite a bit of work. But having done that work you hardly need the original definition any more.

    Or I could argue that energy is the ability to heat things. There is a whole network of types

  • Verbal scores on standardized tests have been declining steadily for a long time. It is believed that one of the main drivers of this is the fact that text books are to a larger and larger extent simplifying their language in order to be more accessible.

    The following can be read in the article.
    Textbooks often are collections of facts and vocabulary words -- one, for example, has long lists of such esoteric words as "saprophyte" and "commensalism" -- but hers is a narrative about scientists and their eff
  • by Bingo Foo ( 179380 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:27PM (#5541079)
    Look at this article [brccs.org] by Dorothy Sayers.
  • The biggest problem I see in textbooks right now is just how full of errors [amasci.com] they are. After that, they have too many pictures, too much white space and rarely get to the point -- they've got fat that needs to be trimmed.

    Check out that link [amasci.com]. It's a really good source for what's wrong with textbooks.
  • not the problem (Score:5, Insightful)

    by NixterAg ( 198468 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:29PM (#5541090)
    While the intent of the subject in the article is noble, it's just another example of educators trying to treat the symptoms and not the sickness. Kids aren't learning science (as well as pretty much every other subject) and the readability of science textbooks have almost nothing to do with it. The problem facing schools today is a cultural problem, not a logistical problem. We keep lowering the bar, instilling some idiotic postmodern philosophy of entitlement into kids who will one day grow into the idiotic adults everyone expects them to be, instead of raising the bar and working kids harder. Can't cut the mustard? You should be embarrassed. Instead, parents blame teachers for their own parental failures and everyone is hunky dory, as long as there is someone to blame. Teachers get beat down by this and feel like nothing they do helps so they quit too, robbing other children of the education provided by Uncle Sam.

    It's funny. I graduated high school in '97 and have since gotten a BS in comp sci and I look back and realize my favorite teachers are the ones that made me bust ass. I couldn't stand them when I was under their totalitarian rule but I learned whether I liked it or not. Sure, I had plenty of teachers whose classes were a joke. Nothing was expected of me and so I did as little as I could get away with...what else would a teenager do? I despise those teachers now, as I realize that their insistence on being my friend and not working hard was a disservice to me.

    There's plenty of blame to go around, whether it be lazy teachers, apathetic parents, cowardly administrators, or rowdy kids, but instead we pour more and more money into facilities, books, technology, or some other taxpayer funded red herring. Kids of the ages mentioned in the article...junior high age...aren't self-motivated. Less than 1% of kids that age have the self-motivation to pursue knowledge so you have to cram it down the little SOBs throats. Eventually, you'll find that the majority of them will then develop a craving for it and your work as a teacher is done.

    It's the exact same way with behavior. You don't ask a child to behave, you have to make them behave. If parents would get over their little ego trip of how high and mighty their children are and treat them like the subordinates they are, this wouldn't be a problem. God forbid we hurt poor little Johnny's self esteem though.
  • by f97tosc ( 578893 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:33PM (#5541125)
    This book seems to fit neatly in a bigger trend.

    Textbooks are becoming more and more readable and accessible, typically somewhat at the expense of sophistication.

    This is good news for many of those who struggle in school (with science in this case). It is bad news for many talented kids that need challenges and prefer abstractions over colorful examples.

    My solution? Realize that all kids are not made alike, and develop a few different books with different methodologies covering the same material. Test the kids for apptitude as well as prefered learning method and give them the book that suits them best.

    Tor
  • by Edmund Blackadder ( 559735 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:36PM (#5541149)
    This a part of a worrying trend in writing books and movies on complicated subject matters in more accessible way.

    It is not just science textbooks, i have noticed the same trend in documentaries and educational movies.

    Well needless to say it is really annoying. First of all the proponents of this new trend all have two things in common - they think their audience is stupid, and they thing the audience does not want to know about the subject matter.

    So basicly they do not teach about the subject matter at all. They teach some details that are some how connected to the subject matter, they are really easy to understand, but do not help the understanding of the subject matter at all. Usually those details are about people, somehow connected to the subject matter. That is because the writers in their belief that their readers are stupid, think the readers would be much more interested reading about people's lives (that of course are written in a way to be similar to the life of the average reader) than history, or science or whatever the subject matter is.

    The quote from that woman's textbook serves the perfect example. It talks about how albert einstein was briliant, yet he hated doing homework ... i am sure every high school student will feel good reading about that. I am also sure they will not learn any physics by reading about that.

    The quote from the older text, teaches actual physics. It is perfect it explains an aspect of the theory of relativity in a way that a student, that is too young to be able to learn it, can at least learn how it fits in the general field of physics, and how it applies in the real world. Thus the student will be able to learn classical physics without worrying that he/she is not learning relativity.

    The new and improved physics passage leaves the student with no knowledge of physics whatsoever. Now parents and teachers may be happy that the student has more fun reading this passage and maybe even remembers it better, but they are fooling themselves, the kid is not learning any physics.

    Maybe passages like this have a place as background sidenotes. But in no way should they replace actual physics. And it seems to me that in that woman's books they do.
  • Constructivism (Score:3, Informative)

    by elflet ( 570757 ) <.ten.noitseuqtxen. .ta. .telfle.> on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:40PM (#5541183)
    the first three books focus on key scientists from the early Greeks to today's contemporaries, explaining how scientific thought has changed.

    Painting with a broad brush, there are two major camps of educators -- those who take an objectivist approach and those who take a constructivist [psychology.org] approach. The objectives focus on learning objectives -- where you can say that all learning results in a specific behavior you can test (e.g. using a standardized test) -- while the constructivists believe that you can't standardize the outcomes because groups collectively negotiate and construct their belief systems. So the constructivists encourage learners to look at multiple viewpoints, become investigators, and draw their own conclusions about the underlying reality.

    (From the article) [Hakim] wrote an 11-volume series, "A History of US"

    Constructivism is popular in teaching the social sciences, where students can be given multiple viewpoints and encouraged to seek out diverse views. It doesn't find much of a home in learning the 3R's, nor in science education -- basic skills education is driven largely these days by the inststance that students pass standardized tests (Textbooks today are hugely accountable to individual state standards defined for that particular course," said Wendy Spiegel, head of communications for Pearson Education) and by the sense that science describes a world in precise, irreducable, and unambiguous terms. Neither of these leave room for the "social construction of meaning" that's so dear to the constructivists.

  • More imaginative (Score:3, Interesting)

    by quantaman ( 517394 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:46PM (#5541212)
    One thing that bugged me with my Junior High science text book was that it seemed to take a very unimaginative and finalized tone forgetting that science isn't a static set of rules and is constantly advancing. I still remember when is shortly after the Dolly experiment I ran across a passage in the textbook. That ran along the lines of "Cloning simply isn't possible and is pure science fiction" (not exact quote memory fuzzy). Needless to say I took a lot less stock in the imaginative opinions of that book thereafter:)
  • by Michael_Burton ( 608237 ) <michaelburton@brainrow.com> on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:48PM (#5541220) Homepage

    In his autobiograpical book Surely You're Joking, Mr. Feynman, physicist Richard Feynman wrote about his service on the State Curriculum Committee, which selected textbooks for California schools. There is an excerpt from the book here. [textbookleague.org]

  • SSTS (Score:4, Interesting)

    by dmorin ( 25609 ) <dmorin@@@gmail...com> on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @09:50PM (#5541229) Homepage Journal
    In college I was heavily involved in a program known as "Science through Society Technology Studies." Basically the premise was that you could teach science better by putting it into social context that kids could understand. Examples of curricula developed while I was there included:
    • Acid rain, where kids looked at what acid rain was as well as what sort of industrial polution could cause it (complete with field work of testing the rain that fell in their own neighborhood)
    • Dead Fish, where statistics were taught by doing a computer simulation that involved determining the amount of dead fish in the local lake due to pollution. Kids of course love this one due to the gross factor.
    • One about having a nuclear reactor in your backyard, but I can't really remember the context.

    Another outstanding textbook was "From Gaia to Selfish Genes", by I think Lynn Margulis. This was a collection of short essays on various biology topics, all highly radical, that was given to a "weed out" biology course for majors in college. THe results of the study I saw were interesting -- the non majors loved it because it was more interesting that the traditional approach, and all the majors hated it because they basically said "Just teach us what you're supposed to teach us so we can get the degree, don't screw with tradition."

    Lastly, a great module was done where a teacher doing a unit on evolution began teaching that the dinosaurs were wiped out by space aliens. The program was complete with a staged firing of the teacher who was warned not to teach that. Afterward the class held a mock trial where they decided her fate.

  • by soundofthemoon ( 623369 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:12PM (#5541329)
    I apologize in advance for lack of references. This is all from memory here.

    The important thing about learning anything isn't rote memorization, but internalization of concepts and then being able to reason from those concepts. Much of science is "common sense", and can be checked out using your intuition - cause preceeds effect, faster things cover set distances in shorter times, etc. But many physical and mathematical concepts are not intuitively obvious.

    In the 80s I heard of an educational program that used physical intuition to help teach "poor students" math and science. The educators knew that people learn using different modalities that develop at different ages. The kinesthetic modality develops first - that's what lets a baby put its hand in its mouth, or find its feet. Next comes the visiual modality. This is extremely powerful - you can recognize one face out of thousands in just a blink of an eye. The most abstract modality is symbolic. You can reason about anything symbolically, but it is the slowest mode, and unlike the others has little "hardware acceleration".

    (There seems to be cool hardware/software in the brain for doing lots of visual processing. For instance, the time it takes to match a shape with the same shape rotated is proportional to the angle of rotation. And Deaf people who grow up using sign language score much better at visual perception tests, as the visual parts of their brains are more developed from using them for language.)

    The program I heard about used an approach of starting with the lowest level modalities and progressing upwards until students had a symbolic grasp of the material.

    For instance, the students were taken out into a field with portable sonar range-finders and computers. They were then asked to run in various manners: constant velocity, accelerating, decelerating, running in a circle, etc. Using the gadgetry, they could see a visual plot of their movement, in terms of velocity and acceleration. This let them tie their kinesthetic understanding of simple physics to a visual one. Building on that, they were able to grasp the mathematical concepts of position, velocity, and acceleration.

    It seems a lot of education tries to deliver information at the symbolic level. If you give students a way to connect that abstract stuff to things they already understand, they do a lot better at internalizing it.

    Piaget showed that people learn at the frontiers of their knowledge. If you tell someone something they've already learned, there isn't any opportunity to learn it again. And if you tell someone something too far removed from what they already know, they can't make a connection to it and won't understand it (try explaining quantum mechanics to someone who doesn't know about atomic theory). But if you tell someone something that they have enough background for, they will be able to make that connection, and voila, learning occurs!

    Hakim's approach of telling stories about scientific progress might make the information easier for students to memorize. However it doesn't seem like it will make the concepts easier to internalize. That takes a more radical approach.
  • by circusboy ( 580130 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:14PM (#5541336)
    no one should be allowed to even think about writing a textbook without reading
    • lies my teacher told me
    • surely you're joking mr. feynman

    in the latter, it was the chapter where feynman was asked to serve on a textbook selection comittee. very enlightening. and scary.

    the first book is a rather scathing review of a dozen high school history books, how they are written, reviewed and edited, (read scrawled, mauled and gutted.) it's actually almost painful to read as you realize how much more interesting history class would have been had they just told you ALL of the facts.
  • by Aetrix ( 258562 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:15PM (#5541343) Homepage
    My undergrad (Biology) advisor had this most excellent poster on his wall:

    (This is what I remember from it... Not an exact quote. But you'll get the gist...)

    --Begin Poster--

    If Baseball was taught like Biology:

    1. Athletes would read about some of the great players in Baseball history.
    2. They would listen to lectures about the fundamental concepts of baseball: batting, fielding, pitching, running.
    3. Athletes would become involved in group discussions about the rules of baseball and the strategies involved in playing a game.
    4. Athletes would assemble for 2-3 hours a week and have "hands-on" experiences with balls and bats in a closed and highly controlled environment.
    5. Athletes would learn and practice the techniques of calculating statistics such as the RBI.
    6. Then athletes would "take the field" and attempt to play a competitive game against other teams who had limited experience on a baseball field

    ---End Poster--Begin Rant--

    Science is not a body of knowledge, but a methodology of answering questions. Though "the hard facts" are important to understanding Science (like memorizing the carbon atom has 6 electrons) these are simply facts. More and more today we have immediately available facts. I haven't even seen "The Handbook of Physics and Chemistry" in dead-tree format for over 5 years now! We need to realize that since information is readily available, the concepts and methods are important. Instead of pounding in facts, teach students how to become talented information-finders. That type of skill will be more important in "the real world" than knowing the chemicals involved in the Krebs Cycle.
  • Bad science. (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Kupek ( 75469 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:28PM (#5541427)
    From "The Science Story":
    You might have heard of Albert Einstein's theory of relativity. Einstein's theory included a small change to the law of conservation of energy. He explained that energy can sometimes be created -- by destroying matter!
    Having a new approach to teaching science is great. I actually think that emphasizing how things were discovered and who discovered them would make science more engaging to a middle school student. I know that I'm certainly interested in it - I've read a few books in my free time on the topics.

    But while you're doing this, make sure what you say is accurate. The above quote is not accurate. Energy is not created; matter is not destroyed. One is changed into the other. If students have previous knowledge of the subject, this statement would confuse them. I understand what she means, but I wouldn't expect a middle school student to. I think this is a great idea, but I hope she has some people who are in the respective fields edit it.
  • by McCrapDeluxe ( 626840 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @10:47PM (#5541532) Journal
    At my high school, we use Paul G. Hewitt's [conceptualphysics.com] physics books. Firstly, I should explain that my school subscribes to the view of "physics first," so all students are required to take a semester of physics freshman year (9th grade). The books provide a great overview of basic physics, have festive little drawings, and have writing full of personality. By the end of the class, many students (including me) love the book, compared to other textbooks, which are promptly forgotten. These books are a good standard for a more basic course's textbook.
  • by Daniel Rutter ( 126873 ) <dan@dansdata.com> on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @11:19PM (#5541684) Homepage
    ...who's had a starring role a few times on The Textbook League [textbookleague.org]'s site. The Textbook League's basic purpose is to point out the large number of textbooks that say things that aren't, you know, true.

    The operator of the League site, Bill Bennetta, posted on the Skeptic list [csicop.org] today on this subject. He said he was interviewed for the Washington Post piece, and gave the journo various straightforward examples of Hakim's deception in her previous books. This got edited down to "Even amid all the acclaim, one textbook group accused Hakim of writing in errors."

    Actually, the League didn't "accuse" her of anything; they darn well proved it, so far as I can see. But who's ever going to be able to check for themselves, while the League is anonymised as "one textbook group"?

    Well, here are the references the Post doesn't want you to see. Check 'em out here [textbookleague.org], here [textbookleague.org] and here [textbookleague.org] (a search reveals a few more [atomz.com], too).

    Basically, Hakim gets stuff wrong, and just loves calling her own religious beliefs "history". Other people's don't get the same treatment.

    Maybe she'll be just great at inspiring kids with the majesty and humanity of the scientific endeavour, tra la. Her past work doesn't bode well, though.

  • by phutureboy ( 70690 ) on Tuesday March 18, 2003 @11:23PM (#5541697)
    IMHO, textbooks have their place but are relied upon much too heavily, as are chalkboards, assigned seating, standardized testing, age segregation and fixed curriculum.

    I have been intrigued for quite a while by the Sudbury Valley model. Sudbury schools are free, democratic schools which allow students the freedom to pursue their own interests, and to learn by doing.

    Suggested reading:


    Sudbury schools are definitely radically different than traditional U.S. public and private schools, and probably aren't for everyone. All I know is that school was absolutely the most miserable experience in my life, and that I undoubtedly would have thrived in a Sudbury-like environment.
  • shameless plug (Score:3, Interesting)

    by saben78 ( 527294 ) on Wednesday March 19, 2003 @01:33AM (#5542186)
    My boss is a 30+ year chemistry professor and over the years has come up with something called HBL. Hypothesis Based Learning.

    It lets the kids individually do an experiment, find any unexplained observations, make a hypothesis, and then go about proving or disproving their hypothesis. All the while documenting everything of course. The kids have a blast because they're actually trying to figure something out and see if their ideas are right. In a single classroom with the same "experiment" there could be 10 or more different hypothesis and even more ways to test them.

    The best part of this is that the lab is not scripted. The kids go into this class and actually have to think for themselves. They can't just follow some instructions and get an A. Also they're learning science the way scientists do real work.

    We're currently part of a huge Department of Education grant in its 3rd year. If you're interested please go to http://waves.okstate.edu [okstate.edu] and look around.

    Also if any Department of Education brass are reading this. Please don't cut our funding! This stuff actually works. The kids are actually enjoying class.

    • Re:shameless plug (Score:3, Interesting)

      by sigwinch ( 115375 )
      That's a cool approach to learning. School is a totally boring experience for too many kids, especially in the technical subjects which ought to be the most fascinating. (The cynical part of me snickers at the coach/teachers who will have to deal with students who've had their minds expanded by HBL.)

      I see familiar names on the contacts page. Dr. Rockley did some consulting work at my employer, and I was impressed with him. (Alas, I was mostly working on other projects and didn't really get to know him.) T

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