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Showing 1 to 15 of 74 results Save | Export
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Vella, Nicole Green; Dunlop, Lynda – Primary Science, 2021
Philosophy is concerned with fundamental questions about knowledge, truth, reality, experience, justice and what is right and wrong. In this article, the authors discuss how philosophy and science can be taught together in the primary classroom.
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Science, Philosophy, Interdisciplinary Approach
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Dunlop, Lynda; de Schrijver, Jelle – School Science Review, 2018
Philosophical dialogue requires an approach to teaching and learning in science that is focused on problem posing and provides space for meaning making, finding new ways of thinking and understanding and for linking science with broader human experiences. This article explores the role that philosophical dialogue can play in science lessons and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Philosophy, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Questioning Techniques
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Koen R. Wessels; Cok Bakker; Arjen E. J. Wals; George Lengkeek – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2024
Confronted by myriad interconnected societal challenges, this paper asks: what kind of pedagogy does justice to the experience and challenge of living in a complex world? Departing from a critical reading of a preparative-logic to education, this paper emphasises students' entangledness: more-or-less consciously, students are uniquely shaped-by…
Descriptors: Social Problems, Difficulty Level, Thinking Skills, Teaching Methods
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Clary, Renee – Science Teacher, 2017
Although the age of the planet, the theory of biological evolution, and climate change are not "scientifically" controversial, students' familial and religious teachings can be perceived to be diametrically opposed to the science curriculum. However, there is a way for teachers to acknowledge alternative views and let students voice them…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Student Attitudes, Reflection, Biology
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Kruse, Jerrid; Wilcox, Jesse – Science and Children, 2017
This column presents ideas and techniques to enhance your science teaching. In this issue the authors discuss a design project they have used with upper elementary students (grades 4-6). They note ways to engage students in thinking philosophically about technology to meet engineering design outcomes in the "Next Generation Science…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Technological Literacy, Elementary School Science, Student Projects
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Eshach, Haim – Science & Education, 2009
This paper introduces a novel strategy for teaching physics: using the Nobel Physics Prize as an organizational theme for high school or even first year university physics, bringing together history, social contexts of science, and central themes in modern physics. The idea underlying the strategy is that the glamour and glitter of the Nobel Prize…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Secondary School Science, College Science
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Reiss, Michael J. – Science & Education, 2009
This article begins by examining whether "science" and "religion" can better be seen as distinct or related worldviews, focusing particularly on scientific and religious understandings of biodiversity. I then explore how people can see the natural world, depending on their worldview, by looking at two contrasting treatments of penguin behaviour,…
Descriptors: World Views, Biodiversity, Science Teachers, Science Education
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Niaz, Mansoor; Cardellini, Liberato – Journal of Chemical Education, 2011
Bohr's model of the atom is considered to be important by general chemistry textbooks. A shortcoming of this model was that it could not explain the spectra of atoms containing more than one electron. To increase the explanatory power of the model, Sommerfeld hypothesized the existence of elliptical orbits. This study aims to elaborate a framework…
Descriptors: Textbooks, Chemistry, Models, Science Education
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Dodick, Jeff; Dayan, Aliza; Orion, Nir – International Journal of Science Education, 2010
This research examines the problems that religious Jewish science teachers in Israeli high schools have in coping with science subjects (such as geological time) which conflict with their religious beliefs. We do this by characterizing the philosophical approaches within Judaism that such teachers have adopted for dealing with such controversy.…
Descriptors: Evolution, Jews, Conflict, Coping
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Açikalin, Mehmet – Journal of Social Science Education, 2014
This article provides an example of a social studies lesson from Turkish educational context in order to facilitate comparison with examples of social studies lessons from other parts of the world. This lesson was recorded in a 7th grade class at a middle school in one of the metropolitan neighborhoods in Istanbul. According to the current…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Social Studies, Civil Rights, Comparative Education
Wright, Handel Kashope, Ed.; Abdi, Ali A., Ed. – Peter Lang New York, 2012
"The Dialectics of African Education and Western Discourses" addresses how continental Africans who have worked or are currently working in the Canadian academy address their dual legacy of African and Euro-American knowledge paradigms. Reflecting a range of approaches to hegemonic Euro-American paradigms that can be summarized as…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, African Studies, Education, Epistemology
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Hacyan, Shahen – European Journal of Physics, 2009
According to Poincare, a geometry cannot be an object of experience since any geometrical experiment must be realized with physical objects, such as rulers and light rays, and it is only their properties that can be tested. This position was apparently refuted by general relativity and the successful confirmation of its predictions by astronomical…
Descriptors: Theories, Scientific Principles, Geometry, Geometric Concepts
Dawes, Lyn – Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, 2011
"Talking Points: Discussion Activities in the Primary Classroom" encourages and supports classroom discussion on a range of topics, enabling children to develop the important life-skill of effective group communication. Children who can explain their own ideas and take account of the points of view and reasons of others are in the process of…
Descriptors: Group Discussion, Discussion (Teaching Technique), Elementary Schools, Teaching Methods
Duschl, Richard A. – 1989
Interest in the application of the history and philosophy of science to science education raises important questions about the effect such considerations will have on educational practice. In this paper, the application emphasizes concepts related to theory testing and theory development specifically and to the growth of knowledge generally. This…
Descriptors: College Science, Epistemology, Higher Education, Philosophy
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Grobman, Arnold; Grobman, Hulda – American Biology Teacher, 1989
The gradual decline of anthropocentrism from 50,000 BC to the present is traced in relation to the controversy over the teaching of evolution and creationism. The discussion focuses on the battle over people's minds as waged in the public schools by fundamentalist religious groups and others. (CW)
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Biology, Creationism, Evolution
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