Design guidelines for adapting scientific research articles: An example from an introductory level, interdisciplinary program on soft matter Documents

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Design guidelines for adapting scientific research articles: An example from an introductory level, interdisciplinary program on soft matter 

written by Elon Langbeheim, Samuel A. Safran, and Edit Yerushalmi

We present design guidelines for using Adapted Primary Literature (APL) as part of current interdisciplinary topics to introductory physics students. APL is a text genre that allows students to comprehend a scientific article, while maintaining the core features of the communication among scientists, thus representing an authentic scientific discourse. We describe the adaptation of         a research paper by Nobel Laureate Paul Flory on phase equilibrium in polymer-solvent mixtures that was presented to high school students in a project-based unit on soft matter. The adaptation followed two design strategies: a) Making explicit the interplay between the theory and experiment. b) Re-structuring the text to map the theory onto the students' prior knowledge. Specifically, we map the theory of polymer-solvent systems onto a model for binary mixtures of small molecules of equal size that was already studied in class.

Published January 24, 2013
Last Modified July 31, 2013