3.9 Article

An Analysis of plant awareness disparity within introductory Biology textbook images

Journal

JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL EDUCATION
Volume 57, Issue 2, Pages 422-431

Publisher

ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1080/00219266.2021.1920301

Keywords

Plant blindness; plant awareness disparity; general biology; introductory biology; textbook analysis

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Plant awareness disparity, or plant blindness, refers to the tendency not to notice plants in one's environment. This study explores how plants and animals are represented in introductory biology textbooks and finds that animals are chosen more often as examples, contributing to plant awareness disparity.
Plant awareness disparity (PAD, formerly plant blindness) is the tendency not to notice plants in one's environment, which leads to the perspective that plants are unimportant. In this paper, we explore how plants and animals are represented in introductory biology textbooks to determine if these texts are contributing to PAD in undergraduate students. We analysed images from four texts that are commonly used as introductory biology textbooks for biology majors, and specifically focused on the introductory, genetics, and evolution chapters. We found that animals are chosen more often as examples of biological concepts in textbook images across all four textbooks, indicating that these texts are contributing to PAD. Textbook producers should focus on including a more equal number of plant and animal examples of biology concepts and processes, and instructors should bring in outside examples and images to supplement those currently in texts that demonstrate a bias towards animals.

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