You Don’t Learn Chemistry From Baking A Cake

I have always argued that educators have to be careful with the concept of “learning by doing.” The fact that a task requires motor activity (hands on) does not require that it also involve mental activity. This is not my original idea – Ausubel (an underappreciated scholar in my opinion) described certain tasks as rote discovery implying exactly the same thing. My favorite classroom example making this point is to compare the instructions for baking a cake (from a box) and the instructions for performing a high school chemistry experiment.

It appears the National Research Council has reached the same conclusion:

The typical high school lab is an isolated add-on that lacks clear goals, does not engage students in discussion and fails to illustrate how scientific methods lead to knowledge, says a report by the National Research Council.

(AP News Report) The full report will be available later this fall.

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Time Locked eBooks

And now, further comment on a favorite topic – the cost of textbooks. ZDNET reports that Princeton and several other colleges will offer students eBooks for certain courses. The eBooks are designed to be read on only a single computer and access is limited to 5 months. This seems pretty restrictive for only a 33% reduction in cost. The problem with this proposal as I see it is that students can purchase the full version and probably sell it back for 50%. In my experience, a once used book also sells for 75% of full cost. The price differential in either case is not very motivating. My target price for the $80 book would be in the $25-30 range.

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