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Institution

Martin Luther College

EducationNew Ulm, Minnesota, United States
About: Martin Luther College is a education organization based out in New Ulm, Minnesota, United States. It is known for research contribution in the topics: Science education & Science, technology, society and environment education. The organization has 4 authors who have published 7 publications receiving 384 citations. The organization is also known as: MLC & Dr. Martin Luther College.

Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: This article found that the characteristics of animals are important determinants of preferences: Animals move, eat, have eyes for sight, communicate by sound, exhibit behaviors that are fun to watch, have short and observable live cycles, interact with humans, can learn, have mates, give birth, and raise their young.
Abstract: This research addressed the following questions: (1) Which science topic do junior high school students prefer to study—plants or animals? (2) Is their preference related to the variables of grade level and sex of student? Public school students from grades 7, 8, and 9 in Avoca, New York participated in the study. Findings show that 9th grade students have a greater interest in biological science topics than do students in the other grades studied. Girls are more interested in biological science topics than boys are. Girls also showed a significant preference for animals over plants. As a group, junior high school students revealed that they prefer animal study over plant study. About half of the student responses categorized as “biological science” did not express a clear-cut preference for either plants or animals. A caution about generalizability is expressed. Interviews of students suggest that the following characteristics of animals are important determinants of preferences: Animals move, eat, have eyes for sight, communicate by sound, exhibit behaviors that are fun to watch, have short and observable live cycles, interact with humans, can learn, have mates, give birth, and raise their young. It was obvious that most students think of mammals when they hear the term “animal.”

99 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: For instance, this paper found that a significant positive correlation exists between the number of passes a student makes at new textbook material and his/her college grade-point average, while women showed a significant preference for adopting a single method of study.
Abstract: College students responding to the Preferred Method of Study (PMOS) questionnaire explained how they approach reading a new textbook chapter for comprehension. Results indicated that a significant positive correlation exists between the number of passes a student makes at new textbook material and his/her college grade-point average. Women showed a significant preference for adopting a single method of study. Less than half of the students queried construct “organizational tools” such as outlines or diagrams as they study a textbook. Students said they would alter their textbook strategies in response to the type of test they expected significantly more often than they would for the type of subject matter being studied. Only 6% of the students said they make a conscious effort to link the new concepts in the text to prior knowledge. There was no discernable relationship between the study strategies undergraduate college students employ and their college grade level (freshman through senior).

74 citations


Authors

Showing all 4 results

NameH-indexPapersCitations
James H. Wandersee44377
Daniel P. Gawrisch2220
John Isch112
Greg Diersen111
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Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Institution in previous years
YearPapers
20212
20021
19881
19862
19831