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      A Teaching Strategy with a Focus on Argumentation to Improve Undergraduate Students’ Ability to Read Research Articles

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          Abstract

          This article describes a teaching strategy for first-year undergraduate life sciences students at a research university, in which they learn to read authentic research articles by focusing on rhetorical moves that play an important role in the authors' argument. We used cognitive apprenticeship as the pedagogical approach.

          Abstract

          The aim of this study is to evaluate a teaching strategy designed to teach first-year undergraduate life sciences students at a research university how to learn to read authentic research articles. Our approach—based on the work done in the field of genre analysis and argumentation theory—means that we teach students to read research articles by teaching them which rhetorical moves occur in research articles and how they can identify these. Because research articles are persuasive by their very nature, we focused on the rhetorical moves that play an important role in authors’ arguments. We designed a teaching strategy using cognitive apprenticeship as the pedagogical approach. It was implemented in a first-year compulsory course in the life sciences undergraduate program. Comparison of the results of a pretest with those of the posttest showed that students’ ability to identify these moves had improved. Moreover, students themselves had also perceived that their ability to read and understand a research article had increased. The students’ evaluations demonstrated that they appreciated the pedagogical approach used and experienced the assignments as useful. On the basis of our results, we concluded that students had taken a first step toward becoming expert readers.

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          The skills of argument

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            Genre Analysis. English in Academic and Research Settings.

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              How literacy in its fundamental sense is central to scientific literacy

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                Author and article information

                Contributors
                Role: Monitoring Editor
                Journal
                CBE Life Sci Educ
                CBE-LSE
                CBE-LSE
                CBE-LSE
                CBE Life Sciences Education
                American Society for Cell Biology
                1931-7913
                1931-7913
                Summer 2014
                : 13
                : 2
                : 253-264
                Affiliations
                [1]*College of Science, University of Amsterdam, 1098 XH Amsterdam, The Netherlands
                [2] Department of Education, Faculty of Mathematics and Natural Sciences, University of Groningen, 9747 AG Groningen, The Netherlands
                Author notes
                Address correspondence to: Miriam A. Ossevoort ( m.a.ossevoort@ 123456rug.nl ).
                Article
                CBE-13-06-0110
                10.1187/cbe.13-06-0110
                4041503
                26086657
                6d39a1b0-1d0f-49fe-a387-cad4050fb80a
                © 2014 E. B. Van Lacum et al. CBE—Life Sciences Education © 2014 The American Society for Cell Biology. This article is distributed by The American Society for Cell Biology under license from the author(s). It is available to the public under an Attribution–Noncommercial–Share Alike 3.0 Unported Creative Commons License ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0).

                “ASCB®” and “The American Society for Cell Biology®” are registered trademarks of The American Society of Cell Biology.

                History
                : 18 June 2013
                : 14 March 2014
                : 15 March 2014
                Categories
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                June 2, 2014

                Education
                Education

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