Every subject has its own language: Patterns of linguistic features of expository texts in German stem textbooks

Journal articleResearchPeer reviewed

Publication data


ByNadine Cruz Neri, Sascha Bernholt, Hendrik Härtig
Original languageEnglish
Published inLinguistics and Education, 86, Article 101405
Pages11
Editor (Publisher)Elsevier Ltd
ISSN0898-5898
DOI/Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1016/j.linged.2025.101405 (Open Access)
Publication statusPublished – 04.2025

STEM education relies heavily on written language that students need to process in order to understand expository texts in the school context. Prior research indicates that students are challenged by certain linguistic features (LFs) prevalent in expository texts. Therefore, it is important that teachers support students adequately in their comprehension process. For German textbooks, however, research that examines which LFs are prevalent in which STEM subject is missing. In this study, we exploratively analyze the patterns of LFs of different STEM subjects (biology, chemistry, geography, mathematics, physics). For this, we examined 398 German texts extracted from 32 secondary textbooks. We found that some LFs are more prevalent in certain STEM subjects than in others. The found patterns of LFs hold the potential to provide concrete starting points for teachers to adequately support their students in processing the LFs of their respective STEM subject. Further implications and limitations are discussed.