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Showing 1 to 15 of 712 results
Talanquer, Vicente – Science & Education, 2013
Studies of the philosophy of chemistry over the past 15 years suggest that chemistry is a hybrid science which mixes scientific pursuits with technological applications. Dominant universal characterizations of the nature of science thus fail to capture the essence of the discipline. The central goal of this position paper is to encourage…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Educational Quality, Science Education, Science Curriculum
Bedford, Daniel; Cook, John – Science & Education, 2013
Agnotology is a term that has been used to describe the study of ignorance and its cultural production (Proctor in "Agnotology: the making and unmaking of ignorance." Stanford University Press, Stanford, 2008). For issues that are contentious in the societal realm, though largely not in the scientific realm, such as human evolution or…
Descriptors: Climate, Science Instruction, Misconceptions, Science and Society
Hodge, Jonathan – Science & Education, 2013
This essay is an interpretation of Charles Darwin's "Origin of Species". It focuses on the contents of the "Origin" as Darwin intended them to be understood and the background to the work, thus revealing the originality (or otherwise) of the work.
Descriptors: Evolution, Books, Science History
Sharma, Ajay – Science & Education, 2012
Despite a near universal consensus among scientists regarding the perils of climate change for human civilizations, climate change has not emerged as a key issue among science educators. This position paper advocates for the centrality of climate change in science education. Using Polanyi's critique of market in capitalist societies, it positions…
Descriptors: Position Papers, Climate, Science Education, Social Change
Berland, Leema K.; McNeill, Katherine L. – Science Education, 2012
Scientific argumentation and explanation are essential practices of science that have been highlighted as equally important for K-12 science education. However, as Osborne and Patterson (2011) have recently argued, both the term "argument" and "explanation" have multiple, overlapping, meanings, and uses in science education. In this article, the…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Science Education, Science Instruction, Classrooms
Osborne, Jonathan; Patterson, Alexis – Science Education, 2012
In "For Whom Is Argument and Explanation a Necessary Distinction? A Response to Osborne and Patterson," Berland and McNeill seek to argue that there is an overlap between these two discourse acts such that, in the welter of classroom life, it is difficult to make the distinction. Indeed, in their article Jonathan Osborne and Alexis Patterson did…
Descriptors: Concept Formation, Educational Policy, Science Education, Science Instruction
Bunge, Mario – Science & Education, 2012
It is argued that the correct answer to the three questions in the title is "no": that the theses being denied derive from traditional philosophy, not from the way the quantum theories are used. For example, the calculation of the energy spectrum of an atom assumes the autonomous existence of the atom, rather than its dependence upon the observer.…
Descriptors: Physics, Quantum Mechanics, Science Education, Theories
Slezak, Peter – Science & Education, 2012
Bunge's writings on the mind-body problem provide a rigorous, analytical antidote to the persistent anti-materialist tendency that has characterized the history of philosophy and science. Bunge gives special attention to dualism and its shortcomings, and this attention is welcome in view of the resurgence of the doctrine today. However, I focus my…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Sciences, Scientific Enterprise, Scientific Principles
Finocchiaro, Maurice A. – Science & Education, 2011
Galileo's telescopic discoveries of 1609-1612 provided a crucial, although not conclusive, confirmation of the Copernican hypothesis of the earth's motion. In Galileo's approach, the Copernican Revolution required that the geokinetic hypothesis be supported not only with new theoretical arguments but also with new observational evidence; that it…
Descriptors: Catholics, Conflict, Cultural Influences, Science Process Skills
Berman, Anthony C. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2014
This viewpoint commentary, written from the perspective of a teacher who has helped to educate students in a wide variety of educational environments, is a reaction to the article published in Anatomical Sciences Education on developing of core syllabuses for the anatomical sciences. After reflecting on the definitions of both curriculum and…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Science Curriculum, Course Descriptions, Science Instruction
Alsop, Steve – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2015
In pursuit of more mindful notions of hybridity, this review essay provides a series of reflections on Mathew Weinstein's representations of Street Medics and "sciences for the red zones of neoliberalism". My analysis draws on three popular ways of thinking with boundaries to offer a critical reading of the boundary-work that the…
Descriptors: Emergency Medical Technicians, Activism, Neoliberalism, Critical Reading
Seaman, Jayson; Quay, John – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2015
In this response to Molly Ware's review of our 2013 book, "John Dewey and Education Outdoors," we extend her suggestion that complexity be regarded as an important, generative force in education reform. Drawing on Dewey's 1933 "Utopian Schools" speech, we discuss the "level deeper" that Dewey sought as he…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices, Difficulty Level
Sameshima, Pauline; Greenwood, David A. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2015
In the context of research universities, what kind of places and spaces can we create for ourselves that foster a holistic vision of learning and community, a vision that is responsive to the shifting social and ecological landscapes of the Anthropocene? How can these spaces simultaneously address the need to nurture both personal and cultural…
Descriptors: Aesthetics, Sustainability, Holistic Approach, Research Universities
Bolender, David L.; Ettarh, Rajunor; Jerrett, David P.; Laherty, Richard F. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2013
Many basic scientists including anatomists are currently involved in decisions related to revisions of the undergraduate medical curriculum. Integration is a common theme in many of these decisions. As described by Harden, integration can occur along a multistep continuum from independent, discipline-based courses to a completely interdisciplinary…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Medical Education, College Curriculum, Integrated Curriculum
Evans, Darrell J. R. – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2013
In the twenty-first century, communication has become truly global. Advances in technology have opened up a host of ways in which we are able to communicate to retrieve or pass on information and knowledge. In many cases we have moved from a place-based communication approach to one of increasing mobility. With this shift in approach, it is…
Descriptors: Audience Awareness, Communication Skills, Communication Strategies, Educational Practices

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