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Showing 1 to 15 of 38 results Save | Export
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Zidny, Robby; Sjöström, Jesper; Eilks, Ingo – Science & Education, 2020
Indigenous knowledge provides specific views of the world held by various indigenous peoples. It offers different views on nature and science that generally differ from traditional Western science. Futhermore, it introduces different perspectives on nature and the human in nature. Coming basically from a Western perspective on nature and science,…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Science Education, Sustainability, Instructional Design
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Beavington, Lee – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
Learners are more disconnected from the natural environment than ever before. Science education occurs predominantly in classrooms and laboratories, settings that rationalize and deconstruct the natural world in a Cartesian-Newtonian paradigm. This often negates humans' relationality and interdependence with other life phenomena and furthermore…
Descriptors: Science Education, Environmental Education, Ecology, Outdoor Education
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Kayumova, Shakhnoza; McGuire, Chad J.; Cardello, Suzanne – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2019
In this conceptual paper, we draw upon the insights of Feminist Science Studies, in particular Karen Barad's concept of agential realism, as a critical analytical tool to re-think nature and culture binaries in dominant science knowledge-making practices and explanatory accounts, and their possible implications for science education in the context…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Environmental Education, Feminism, Justice
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Mueller, Michael P.; Pattillo, Kemily K.; Mitchell, Debra B.; Luther, Rachel A. – International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 2011
After taking seriously the idea that nature should have human rights argued by Cormac Cullinan in Orion Magazine (January/February 2008), we examined the lessons that could be learned from the tree that owns itself in Athens, Georgia. The point is to engage others in environmental and science education in a critical conversation about how school…
Descriptors: Science Education, Plants (Botany), Civil Rights, Relationship
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Nookathoti, Trinadh – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2022
Field of education is associated with herculean task and innate responsibility of escorting societies forward. Across space and time, it has been an unambiguous synthesis that education should precede any progress or change. It helps humans to understand themselves and better their interaction with rest of the society. Hence the field of education…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Educational History, Social Bias, Role of Education
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Korfiatis, Kostas J.; Stamou, Anastasia G.; Paraskevopoulos, Stephanos – Science Education, 2004
In this article, the environmental content of the textbooks used for the teaching of natural sciences in Greek primary schools was examined. Specifically, by employing the method of content analysis, both representational (metaphors, depictions, values, etc.) and cognitive ecological concepts) elements, building images of nature, and shaping our…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Natural Sciences, Content Analysis, Environmental Education
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El Halwany, Sarah; Bencze, Larry; Hassan, Nurul; Schaffer, Kristen; Milanovic, Minja; Zouda, Majd – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
In life history methodologies, 'human' lives appear to take primacy over other lives. Within science education literature, life history methods often are approached as reflective tools to make meaning out of teachers' pedagogical practices and commitments. In the present research, we tinker with life history research, to follow its performative…
Descriptors: Science Education, Educational Research, Biographies, College Faculty
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Hoffman, Ellen J.; State, Matthew W. – Journal of the American Academy of Child & Adolescent Psychiatry, 2010
Objective: This review considers the impact of chromosomal studies on the understanding of childhood neuropsychiatric syndromes, highlighting key discoveries, advances in technology, and new challenges faced by clinicians trying to interpret recent findings. Method: We review the literature on the genetics of child psychiatric disorders, including…
Descriptors: Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder, Investigations, Schizophrenia, Emotional Disturbances
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Crioni, Renato; Zuin, Vânia Gomes – Policy Futures in Education, 2021
This article aims to discuss the issue of environmental degradation based on understanding the material foundation of modern socialisation, which in capitalism is centred on the production of surplus value. This topic is justified by the hegemonic way in which the environmental issue is currently addressed: the inevitability of environmental…
Descriptors: Environmental Education, Science Education, Critical Theory, Science and Society
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Jeong, Sophia; Sherman, Brandon; Tippins, Deborah J. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
As products of the Anthropocene, the epoch of human ecological impact, models of environmental and social sustainability have been rooted in humanism, centering human agency and taking humanity as the prime reference point in understanding the world. Discourses around sustainability pose questions of how we are trying to sustain our world and our…
Descriptors: Humanism, Science Education, Scientific Literacy, Sustainability
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Kurki-Suonio, Kaarle – Science & Education, 2011
This article sketches a framework of ideas developed in the context of decades of physics teacher-education that was entitled the "perceptional approach". Individual learning and the scientific enterprise are interpreted as different manifestations of the same process aimed at understanding the natural and social worlds. The process is understood…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Enterprise, Interaction, Birth Order
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Dickinson, Colby – Transformation in Higher Education, 2019
Background: Issues of identity, interdependence, relationality and violence are far larger than the human species alone, although humanity has often pretended as if it alone were the beneficiaries of studying such ideas. Aim: Pedagogically, the complexity of existence beyond human being must influence the traditional humanities curriculum or risk…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Intellectual Disciplines, Interdisciplinary Approach, Humanism
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Rohstock, Anne – History of Education, 2021
This article charts some of the historical paths that have helped bring forth, in late-modern societies, what I call scientised educational discourses and practices. Though the project of forming the 'scientific man' can be traced back to the nineteenth century, it is argued that the nature of the project changed once it became aligned with the…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Practices, War, Foreign Policy
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Castano Rodriguez, Carolina – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2016
Through a critical textual analysis of the content and structure of the new Australian science curriculum, in this paper I identify the values it encourages and those that are absent. I investigate whether the Australian science curriculum is likely to promote the attitudes needed to educate generations of children who act more responsibly with…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Curriculum, Science Education, Ecology
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Lustrino, Michele – Journal of Education and Learning, 2021
Every substance is associated to emission of electromagnetic radiation whose peaks are essentially influenced by temperature. Hot bodies (i.e., at T >700 °C) emit electromagnetic radiation in the field of visible light (incandescent light). The radiation emitted by cold bodies (i.e., at normal ambient conditions) in the visible light range is…
Descriptors: Physics, Scientific Concepts, Concept Teaching, Mineralogy
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