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Learning Science Facts Doesn't Boost Science Reasoning

Here is a "well, duh" moment: A study of college freshmen in the U.S. and China found that Chinese students know more science facts than their American counterparts -- but both groups are nearly identical when it comes to their ability, or lack of it, to do scientific reasoning. The study suggests that educators must go beyond teaching science facts if they hope to boost students’ reasoning ability.

 Am I being overly cynical here? This seems like it would be obvious to anyone who's sat in a science or engineering class. How many people did you know in school who seemed to know the material backwards and forwards but couldn't solve the problems on the exams?

Anyway, researchers figured this out after testing nearly 6,000 students majoring in science and engineering at seven universities -- four in the U.S. and three in China. Chinese students greatly outperformed American students on factual knowledge of physics -- averaging 90% on one test, versus the American students’ 50%, for example.

But in a test of science reasoning, both groups averaged around 75% -- and this for students hoping to major in science or engineering. How much worse it is for non-science majors they don't say.

 You can read the full release  on this here:

 http://www.newswise.com/articles/view/548591/?sc=dwtr;xy=5017520

Published Friday, January 30, 2009 9:04 PM by Lee_Teschler

Comments

 

cnmaker said:

Does it need to reaserch? hundreds of years ago educatin in china has been proved this result. knowing more science facts is not equal to having more ability to do case reasoning.

To deal with examination, chinese student has to remember many useless materials, and these materials will be fogotten after exam.

March 9, 2009 10:02 PM
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