Subject: Re The Electric Wilderness -- one of the classic EMF books Date: Sun, 18 Mar 2001 105540 -0600 From: Roy BeaversTo: guru -------------------------------------------------- .........Response from EMF-L........ -------- Original Message -------- Subject: Re: The Electric Wilderness -- one of the classic EMF books (guru). Date: Sun, 18 Mar 2001 14:44:46 +0100 From: creuss@bluewin.ch (Christoph Reuss) To: roy@emfguru.com > The "science" experts of the power company > who can recite a catechism of text book knowledge that is comfortably > ensconced within the science establishment Talking about textbooks... you may find the following study of interest. Note the phrase that the textbook "publishers now employ more people to censor books for content that might offend any organized lobbying group than they do to check the correctness of facts. From a business point of view, that makes sense." Cheerio, Chris Study: the dumbing-down of US science textbooks A recent study of the 12 most-used science textbooks at US middle schools found that they are so full of errors that none of them are acceptable. The author of the 2-year study is physics professor John Hubisz, president of the American Association of Physics Teachers. He said about the textbooks (which are used by 85% of US school children): "These are terrible books, and they're probably a strong component of why we do so poorly in science." He also said that many errors are so basic that anyone who had taken a science class would be able to catch them. (So the textbook authors had taken no such class?) The full text of the report is online at http://www.psrc-online.org/curriculum/pdf/hubisz.pdf _______________________________Excerpts_______________________________ Final Report The David and Lucile Packard Foundation Grant #1998-4248 Review of Middle School Physical Science Texts John L. Hubisz, Ph.D., Hubisz@unity.ncsu.edu Purpose The purpose of this grant was to review and critique the physical science in Middle School (grades 6, 7, and 8, although some schools called Junior High designate grades 7, 8, and 9) science textbooks with regard to the scientific accuracy, adherence to an accurate portrayal of the scientific approach, and the appropriateness and pedagogic effectiveness of the material presented for the particular grade level. We also noted such things as readability, attractiveness, quality of illustrations, and whether material such as laboratory activities, suggested home activities, exercises to test understanding, and resource suggestions where considered appropriate. [...] General Overall Observations [...] The books have a very large number of errors, many irrelevant photographs, complicated illustrations, experiments that could not possibly work, and diagrams and drawings that represented impossible situations. [...] The general reading level has deteriorated markedly over the last 20-40 years. The publishers, as noted later, have responded to this by dropping the level of science texts. William A. Henry, III, writes in *In Defense of Elitism* of Cornell professor Donald Hayes' results of sampling 788 textbooks used between 1860 and 1992. Hayes says, "Honors high school texts are no more difficult than an eighth grade reader was before World War II." On further reading, "... the language difficulty of textbooks has dropped by about twenty percent during the past couple of generations. ... Perhaps the best measure of what has gone wrong is the fact, attested to by textbook authors and editors, that publishers now employ more people to censor books for content that might offend any organized lobbying group than they do to check the correctness of facts. From a business point of view, that makes sense. A book is far more apt to be struck off a purchase order because it contains terminology or vignettes that irritate the hypersensitive than because it is erroneous." Publishers are much more interested in satisfying a group of selection committee members who typically have little knowledge of the subject matter, but are impressed by pretty pictures and seemingly up-to-date new information which for the intended audience is not at all relevant. Our reviewers noted the same sort of "dumbing down" in these elementary texts and all the reviewers commented on their encyclopedic nature, not only encyclopedic, but also containing topics well beyond the capacity of Middle School students. [...] [ The report then gives 89 pages of descriptions ] [ of the worst scientific errors in the textbooks. ] Conclusions 1. Scientific Accuracy: Not one of the books we reviewed reached a level that we could call "scientifically accurate" as far as the physical science contained therein. The sheer number of errors precludes such a designation. While we were not looking specifically at the biological component of the texts, there were obvious errors there also. We were not looking for typographical and grammar errors, but many were noted and have not been reported. Many of the obvious errors could be easily corrected, but the subtle errors (including misuse of technical words or phrases, the promulgation of ideas not validated by scientists, and promotion of "politically correct" views) that would leave incorrect implications would be more difficult to root out. [...] Archive provided courtesy of WaveGuide, http://www.wave-guide.org Reprinted with permission of Roy Beavers, http://www.emfguru.com