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Amy Teegarden's avatar

I love technical terms. They can be more specific than simpler descriptions. I think the best example of this I've seen is in the Upgoer Five comic from xkcd. (https://xkcd.com/1133/). Look at the description of what's in the lowest tank: "That stuff they burned in lights before houses had power." That's not very specific. Is it whale oil? Candle wax? It's actually kerosene, but there's no way of knowing that just from the diagram.

But! It's only useful to know it's kerosene and not whale oil if you're already familiar with kerosene. The danger of technical terms is that you find out the name for something and you feel like you know what it is. What fuel does the first stage of the Saturn V use? "Kerosene." What's kerosene? "Ummm...it's the fuel in the first stage of the Saturn V!" If you just memorize the word, you won't know that this is a flammable material commonly used in lamps and lanterns before electricity. This is why we like to emphasize names for things that relate to what our students are already familiar with. We don't want them just to know the "official" labels. We want them to have vivid pictures in their mind about what the thing is like, how it works, what its role is. "That stuff they burned in lights before houses had power" isn't specific enough to point someone to the right substance, but it gives you more information than a word you've never heard before.

There are still some benefits to learning the technical term: you can communicate information about the Saturn V fuel to someone who does know what kerosene is. And you can look up kerosene and find out more about it. (In my opinion, this is the real reason to teach technical terms: it makes searching easier!)

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Jessica S's avatar

I think only non-botanists would get offended by you referring to flower parts and bees by animal sexual anatomy names. My college botany prof was like, "Botanists love to talk about sex! Get a bunch of botanists in a room, that's all we talk about!" It's exactly the metaphor I used to teach flower anatomy last year because my kids know their body parts and because, personally, I think it's really hard to memorize all those science-y names. It's more important to know what the parts do, first. On the other hand, plenty of non-botanist's children do and always will take SiW, so, eh, you made a mistake and learned. That's great! It's a real downer is when we fail to learn from our mistakes. This is the level we should measure success from.

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