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Ediger, Marlow – 2000
Language arts experiences integrate well with quality science lessons and units of study. For example, there are many opportunities for listening, speaking, reading, and writing activities in science. Ideas gleaned in science need to be communicated in diverse ways involving one or more senders and receivers of messages. Students may read about…
Descriptors: Content Area Reading, Content Area Writing, Elementary Education, Language Arts

Hildebrand, Gaell M. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1998
Challenges ways in which a positivist view of science has led to hegemonic discourse on writing to learn science and highlights contradictions in this discourse. Argues for pedagogy that draws on critical, feminist, and hegemonic pedagogies and incorporates affective, creative, critical, cognitive, and diverse language practices set within…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Content Area Writing, Critical Theory, Educational Change

Lather, Patti – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 1998
The article to which this essay responds advises risky practices that trouble traditional distinctions between science and not-science (things not scientific in nature), particularly its argument to politicize science as a way to organize teaching. Raises questions about science as a regime of truth in a place where such questions carry much…
Descriptors: Consciousness Raising, Content Area Writing, Critical Theory, Educational Change
Bos, Nathan; And Others – 1997
Having K-12 students create artifacts can serve several purposes within an effective science curriculum. Through World Wide Web (WWW) publishing projects, students' cognition and motivation can be improved and the "authenticity" of their work increased, relating to recent thinking about situated learning and constructivist science…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Computer Uses in Education, Content Area Writing, Electronic Publishing