| Abstract Detail
Teaching Section Wandersee, James H. [1], Clary, Renee M. [2]. Learning Outcomes From Requiring and Evaluating Science Textbook Annotation: The Polymath System . We studied the effects of our Polymath System of science textbook annotation on college biology students' reading habits and their evolving comprehension of assigned science texts. We employed a qualitative, interpretivist research design (Strauss & Corbin, 1990) that involved triangulating data from: (a) thousands of system-conforming textbook annotations; (b) students' post-course feedback comments on the educational value of the system; and (c) instructor notes on text-related classroom conversations and observations. Most student participants (86%) endorsed the Polymath System as being superior to their previous book-based studying approaches. Additionally, endorsees spontaneously emphasized its capabilities to make the reading relevant to them (83%); to sustain their focus across the length of the book (91%); and to integrate text's contents with what they already knew (85%). The Polymath System enhanced both the teaching and learning. The instructor was able to: (a) sample the students' resultant, unique cognitive responses to the textbook's contents; (b) confirm that each student had actually read the book; (c) re-teach any annotation-flagged content areas revealing ambiguous understanding; and (d) evaluate, grade, and reward a student's science-reading-based annotations. Students confided that they had spontaneously begun using the system in other college courses as well--an indicator of perceived learning value. Log in to add this item to your schedule
1 - Louisiana State University, Dept. of Educational Theory, Policy, & Practice, Ph.D. Studies in Biology Education, 223 Peabody Hall, Baton Rouge, LA, 70803, USA 2 - Mississippi State University, Dept. of Geosciences, 301-B Hilbun Hall, Mississippi State, Mississippi, 39762, USA
Keywords: Polymath System textbook annotation learning outcomes college biology reflective practice reading comprehension.
Presentation Type: Oral Paper:Papers for BSA Sections Session: 36 Location: Superior A/Cliff Lodge - Level C Date: Tuesday, July 28th, 2009 Time: 10:30 AM Number: 36009 Abstract ID:86 |