Extraordinary Animals and Expository Writing: Zoo in the Classroom

Abstract
A zoo outreach program led to placing animals in classrooms where those animals became foci for numerous learning activities such as writing, observing, and care. Systematic debriefings suggested uniqueness to learning outcomes connected to zoo animals. Subsequent analysis of student writing indicated that students responded to situational interest by recording more observations, made use of more science facts, and used more science vocabulary when writing about unique animals (albino hedgehog, legless lizard) than ‘ordinary’ animals (rabbit, dove). The results are interpreted in terms of motivation, creating situational interest, and the familiarity of the schema available to the students. Policy implications are discussed.
Notes
ID: 5649069101
Year of Publication
2005
Journal
J Sci Educ Technol Journal of Science Education and Technology
Volume
14
Issue
3
Pagination
299-304
Publication Language
English
ISBN Number
1059-0145
Trainin, Guy, Kathleen Wilson, Mimi Wickless, and David Brooks. 2005. “Extraordinary Animals And Expository Writing: Zoo In The Classroom”. J Sci Educ Technol Journal Of Science Education And Technology 14 (3): 299-304.
Journal Article