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Showing 2,191 to 2,205 of 12,293 results
Cavicchi, Elizabeth Mary – Science & Education, 2008
Two students, meeting together with a teacher, redid historical experiments. Unlike conventional instruction where science topics and practices often fragment, they experienced interrelatedness among phenomena, participants' actions, and history. This study narrates actions that fostered an interrelated view. One action involved opening up…
Descriptors: Science History, Conventional Instruction, Science Experiments, Science Education
Davson-Galle, P. – Science & Education, 2008
Like many readers of this journal, I have long been an advocate of having science students introduced to philosophy of science. In particular, influenced by the Philosophy for Children movement founded by Matthew Lipman, I have advocated such an introduction as early as possible and have championed early secondary school as an appropriate place.…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Science Education, Science Instruction, Science Curriculum
Nehm, Ross H.; Young, Rebecca – Science & Education, 2008
This study explores the extent to which the term "sex hormone" is used in science textbooks, and whether the use of the term "sex hormone" is associated with pre-empirical concepts of sex dualism, in particular the misconceptions that these so-called "sex hormones" are sex specific and restricted to sex-related physiological functioning. We found…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Medicine, Biology, Secondary School Science
Schmaus, Warren – Science & Education, 2008
The Durkheimian concept of the density of social relationships may prove more fruitful than the historical materialist notion of a social hierarchy for thinking about the social location of epistemic agents in science. To define a scientist's social location in terms of the density of her professional relationships with other scientists permits us…
Descriptors: Scientists, Hypothesis Testing, Science and Society, Professional Isolation
Crasnow, Sharon – Science & Education, 2008
Feminist philosophy of science has been criticized on several counts. On the one hand, it is claimed that it results in relativism of the worst sort since the political commitment to feminism is "prima facie" incompatible with scientific objectivity. On the other hand, when critics acknowledge that there may be some value in work that feminists…
Descriptors: Feminism, Epistemology, Criticism, Science Education
Rolin, Kristina – Science & Education, 2008
Physics education reform movements should pay attention to feminist analyses of gender in the culture of physics for two reasons. One reason is that feminist analyses contribute to an understanding of a "chilly climate" women encounter in many physics university departments. Another reason is that feminist analyses reveal that certain styles of…
Descriptors: Feminism, Physics, Educational Change, Epistemology
Ginev, Dimitri Jordan – Science & Education, 2008
In this paper, I consider the relevance of the view of cognitive existentialism to a multi-gendered picture of science education. I am opposing both the search for a particular feminist standpoint epistemology and the reduction of philosophy of science to cultural studies of scientific practices as championed by supporters of postmodern political…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Science Education, Scientific Principles, Feminism
Intemann, Kristen – Science & Education, 2008
Recent feminist philosophers of science have argued that feminist values can contribute to rational decisions about which scientific theories to accept. On this view, increasing the number of feminist scientists is important for ensuring rational and objective theory acceptance. The Underdetermination Thesis has played a key role in arguments for…
Descriptors: Feminism, Scientists, Values, Gender Issues
Landau, Iddo – Science & Education, 2008
Feminist standpoint theory has important implications for science education. The paper focuses on difficulties in standpoint theory, mostly regarding the assumptions that different social positions produce different types of knowledge, and that epistemic advantages that women might enjoy are always effective and significant. I conclude that the…
Descriptors: Feminism, Scientific Research, Females, Males
Pinnick, Cassandra L. – Science & Education, 2008
This paper examines the relation between situated cognition theory in science education, and feminist standpoint theory in philosophy of science. It shows that situated cognition is an idea borrowed from a long since discredited philosophy of science. It argues that feminist standpoint theory ought not be indulged as it is a failed challenge to…
Descriptors: Feminism, Women Scientists, Science and Society, Science Education
Pedretti, Erminia G.; Bencze, Larry; Hewitt, Jim; Romkey, Lisa; Jivraj, Ashifa – Science & Education, 2008
Although science, technology, society and environment (STSE) education has gained considerable force in the past few years, it has made fewer strides in practice. We suggest that "science" teacher identity plays a role in the adoption of STSE perspectives. Simply put, issues-based STSE education challenges traditional images of a science teacher…
Descriptors: Ideology, Science Teachers, Foreign Countries, Science and Society
Borenstein, Jason – Science & Education, 2008
Debates concerning how the issue of human life's origins should be handled within the confines of American public schools still continue. In order to mitigate the impact that evolution has on students, some school boards and state legislatures have recommended that stickers voicing a disclaimer about evolution be placed in biology textbooks. Even…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Biology, Public Education, Public Schools
Hermann, Ronald S. – Science & Education, 2008
Although evolution has long been considered a controversial issue, little effort has been made to ensure that instructional approaches address the controversial nature of the issue. A framework for understanding the nature of controversy and some defining characteristics of controversial issues are provided. In light of this framework evolution is…
Descriptors: Evolution, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Teaching Methods, Science Education
Kolsto, Stein Dankert – Science & Education, 2008
Scholars have argued that the history of science might facilitate an understanding of processes of science. Focusing on science education for citizenship and active involvement in debates on socioscientific issues, one might argue that today's post-academic science differs from academic science in the past, making the history of academic science…
Descriptors: Science History, Citizenship, Democracy, Democratic Values
Weinstein, Matthew – Science & Education, 2008
With an eye towards a potential scientific ethics curriculum, this paper examines four contrasting discourses regarding the ethics of using human subjects in science. The first two represent official statements regarding ethics. These include the U.S.'s National Science Education Standards, that identify ethics with a professional code, and the…
Descriptors: War, Ethics, Science Education, Science Instruction

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