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Analyzing Media
Articles about Science
-- A Guide for Discussion and
Writing --
General Questions:
- Characterize
the general purpose of the article:
is it reporting on a new discovery? analyzing a scientific
controversy or issue under debate? profiling the work of a scientist
or group of scientists? explaining a basic concept? highlighting key
questions raised by new data that have yet to be answered? other? a
combination of the above?
- Does
it come to a definite conclusion, or is it more open-ended?
- Is
the article informative, argumentative, or a combination of the two?
How does that affect the article's content and tone?
Does the article seem biased in any way?
If so, is that bias a detriment?
(Another way to get at this issue:
how objective is the article?)
- Consider
the examples the author uses to support his/her main points.
Are they appropriate? Which
are the most effective, and why?
Do the examples raise any questions unacknowledged by the
author?
- Examine
the author's use of metaphors, analogies, or other comparisons.
How effective are they? Do
such literary devices complement or detract from the scientific basis
of the article? To what
extent?
- What
kinds of authorities or experts does the article cite?
How effectively are they used by the author?
Consider people, institutions, studies, historical documents,
etc. How much authority
do they add to the article?
Questions Related to the Scientific
Method:
- Look
at how the author discusses hypotheses, theories, data, observations,
and/or experiments. How
much information is given? What
kinds of things are left out? Are
these omissions important or not?
Are you provided with enough data to make an informed judgment
about the conclusions of cited research, or will you have to do more
investigation by consulting other sources?
- Does
the article comment on or characterize the scientific method?
If so, how? What does it teach you about how science gets done, how
experiments might be set up, how data is gathered, how theories are
devised or changed, etc.?
Questions that Stimulate Reflection
and Research:
- Does
the author assume her readers will possess certain kinds of knowledge?
Do these assumptions impede your understanding of the article?
What do you need to know that you didn't know before?
- How
does the information in the article correspond to your own knowledge
of science? Did you learn
new things? Did some
items contradict your previous beliefs or knowledge?
Did the article, in general, seem accurate?
How does it correspond to what we've learned in our class about
the scientific method, genetics, evolution, etc.?
- What
sources does the article point provide, in case you'd like to do
follow-up research? How
specific are these references? How
much credibility do they provide?
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Mike Bryson
Associate Professor
University College
Roosevelt University
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Lobby of Roosevelt's Alfred A. Robin Campus
(opened 1996)

Roosevelt's National Landmark, the
Auditorium Building, downtown Chicago

The Gage Building: Roosevelt's Center for
Professional Advancement (opened 2000) and another downtown landmark
Last updated
01/30/06
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