Visualization in Mathematics, Reading and Science Education

Visualization in Mathematics, Reading and Science Education

von: Linda M. Phillips, Stephen P. Norris, John S. Macnab

Springer-Verlag, 2010

ISBN: 9789048188161 , 106 Seiten

Format: PDF

Kopierschutz: DRM

Windows PC,Mac OSX für alle DRM-fähigen eReader Apple iPad, Android Tablet PC's

Preis: 96,29 EUR

  • Material Properties under Intensive Dynamic Loading
    Microfluidic Technologies for Miniaturized Analysis Systems
    The Machines of Leonardo Da Vinci and Franz Reuleaux - Kinematics of Machines from the Renaissance to the 20th Century
    Magnetohydrodynamics - Historical Evolution and Trends
    Analytical Methods for Problems of Molecular Transport
    Optimal Design of Complex Mechanical Systems - With Applications to Vehicle Engineering
  • Enterprise Interoperability - New Challenges and Approaches
    Heat Conduction - Mathematical Models and Analytical Solutions
    Advances in Robot Kinematics - Mechanisms and Motion
    Theory of Concentrated Vortices - An Introduction
    Innovation in Life Cycle Engineering and Sustainable Development
    Spectral Finite Element Method - Wave Propagation, Diagnostics and Control in Anisotropic and Inhomogeneous Structures
 

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Visualization in Mathematics, Reading and Science Education


 

Science education at school level worldwide faces three perennial problems that have become more pressing of late. These are to a considerable extent interwoven with concerns about the entire school curriculum and its reception by students. The rst problem is the increasing intellectual isolation of science from the other subjects in the school curriculum. Science is too often still taught didactically as a collection of pre-determined truths about which there can be no dispute. As a con- quence, many students do not feel any 'ownership' of these ideas. Most other school subjects do somewhat better in these regards. For example, in language classes, s- dents suggest different interpretations of a text and then debate the relative merits of the cases being put forward. Moreover, ideas that are of use in science are presented to students elsewhere and then re-taught, often using different terminology, in s- ence. For example, algebra is taught in terms of 'x, y, z' in mathematics classes, but students are later unable to see the relevance of that to the meaning of the universal gas laws in physics, where 'p, v, t' are used. The result is that students are c- fused and too often alienated, leading to their failure to achieve that 'extraction of an education from a scheme of instruction' which Jerome Bruner thought so highly desirable.