Most college students lack scientific literacy: Study
January 8th, 2011 - 6:11 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Jan 8 (ANI): A new study from Michigan State University has pointed out that most college students don’t have the basic scientific literary skills to understand the causes and effects of climate change.
“Improving students’ understanding of these biological principles could make them better prepared to deal with important environmental issues such as global climate change,” said Charles “Andy” Anderson.
The study assessed more than 500 students at 13 U.S. colleges for knowledge of fundamental science.
Most students did not truly understand the processes that transform carbon. They failed to apply principles such as the conservation of matter, which holds that when something changes chemically or physically, the amount of matter at the end of the process needs to equal the amount at the beginning.
Most students also incorrectly believe plants obtain their mass from the soil rather than primarily from carbon dioxide in the atmosphere.
Anderson believes that biology textbooks and high-school and college science instructors need to do a better job of teaching the fundamentals - particularly how matter transforms from gaseous to solid states and vice-versa.
The implications are great for a generation of citizens who will grapple with complicated environmental issues such as clean energy and carbon sequestration more than any generation in history, Anderson said.
“One of the things I’m interested in is students’ understanding of environmental problems. And probably the most important environmental problem is global climate change,” he said.
And that’s attributable to a buildup of carbon dioxide in the atmosphere. And understanding where that carbon dioxide is coming from and what you can do about it fundamentally involves understanding the scientific carbon cycle.”
The study is published in the January issue of BioScience. (ANI)
- Tropical forest growth could worsen carbon dioxide problem - Aug 16, 2011
- Microbes aren't accelerating global warming as expected - Apr 27, 2010
- Scientists estimate sea level rise by studying past carbon dioxide levels - May 02, 2011
- Tree plantation may not fight global warming - May 26, 2011
- Genetically altered trees could reduce global warming - Oct 02, 2010
- Ancient leaves shed light on future climate - May 07, 2010
- Ocean warming might hit microbes' carbon storage capacity - Feb 13, 2012
- Freshwater methane emission changes greenhouse gas equation - Jan 07, 2011
- 'Rising CO2 levels threaten aquatic food webs' - May 08, 2012
- Traveling by car 'contributes to global warming much more than by plane' - Aug 05, 2010
- Drop in CO2 triggered polar ice sheet formation - Dec 02, 2011
- Earth witnessed extreme global warming around 40mn yrs ago - Nov 11, 2010
- Using Mother Nature's method to save oceans' marine life - Jan 20, 2011
- Earth will recover faster from global warming show prehistoric evidence - Apr 23, 2011
- Ancient fossils hold clues for predicting future climate change - Apr 09, 2011
Tags: andy anderson, biological principles, biology textbooks, carbon cycle, carbon dioxide in the atmosphere, carbon sequestration, clean energy, college science, college students, conservation of matter, effects of climate change, environmental issues, environmental problem, environmental problems, fundamental science, global climate change, literacy study, michigan state university, science instructors, soil