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Showing 1 to 15 of 159 results Save | Export
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Michael R. Matthews – Science & Education, 2024
Beginning 60 years ago, Thomas Kuhn has had a significant impact across the academy and on culture more widely. And he had a great impact on science education research, theorising, and pedagogy. For the majority of educators, the second edition (1970) of his "Structure of Scientific Revolutions" (Kuhn, 1970a) articulated the very nature…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Philosophy, Science Education, Educational History
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Kinchin, Ian M.; Thumser, Alfred E. – Journal of Biological Education, 2023
This paper uses an autoethnographic case study to analyse the difficulties inherent in the professional journey from bioscience researcher to research-informed, reflective bioscience teacher. This is viewed through a philosophy of becoming. The major demand placed upon the academic to achieve this transition is seen as the conscious adoption of a…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Researchers, Science Teachers, Career Development
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Turley, Emma L. – Qualitative Research Journal, 2023
Purpose: Phenomenology has a long tradition as a qualitative research method in the social and health sciences. The application of phenomenological methods to understand lived experiences and subjectivities offers researchers a rich tapestry of methodological approaches, often however, the availability of these methods to researchers is tempered…
Descriptors: Phenomenology, Qualitative Research, Philosophy, Social Sciences
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Raina, Dhruv – Higher Education for the Future, 2023
This article takes up the argument from an earlier article and seeks to detail the importance and role of the history and philosophy of science (HPS), conceived as a unitary interdisciplinary field, in science education. However, on this count, it not only seeks to ground the salience for science education at the school level but also its role in…
Descriptors: Science History, Philosophy, Interdisciplinary Approach, Science Education
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Pieterman-Bos, Annelies; van Mil, Marc H. W. – Science & Education, 2023
Biomedical data science education faces the challenge of preparing students for conducting rigorous research with increasingly complex and large datasets. At the same time, philosophers of science face the challenge of making their expertise accessible for scientists in such a way that it can improve everyday research practice. Here, we…
Descriptors: Philosophy, Science Education, Scientific Principles, Data Science
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David Byrne – International Journal of Social Research Methodology, 2024
Conventional approaches to causation in the social sciences draw on approaches in the Philosophy of Science in which a causal force acts on cases and generates change in the form of events. This relies on just one of the Aristotelian conceptions of cause - efficient cause - what brings the effect in to being. We should also pay attention to Final…
Descriptors: Personal Autonomy, Social Sciences, Causal Models, Social Change
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Chakravartty, Anjan – Science & Education, 2023
How is knowledge pertaining to science best transferred to the public in order to bolster support for science-based policy and governance, thereby serving the common good? Herein lies a well-recognized challenge: widespread public support arguably requires a widespread understanding of science itself, but this is naturally undermined by the…
Descriptors: Scientific Literacy, Knowledge Level, Public Opinion, Science and Society
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Zara Thokozani Kamwendo – Teaching Theology & Religion, 2024
This piece is about the value of decolonization for teaching and doing science-engaged theology. I argue that decolonization should be seen as a useful tool that helps students, teachers, and scholars to re-imagine the modern distinction between science and theology/religion.
Descriptors: Philosophy, Decolonization, Teaching Methods, Religion
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Winkelmann, Jan – Science & Education, 2023
Idealizations are omnipresent in science. However, to date, science education research has paid surprisingly little attention to the use of idealizations in fostering students' model competence and understanding of the nature of science (NOS). The starting point for the theoretical reflection in this paper is that insufficient consideration of…
Descriptors: Science Education, Scientific Concepts, Educational Research, Science Instruction
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Nicolaisen, Line Bruun; Ulriksen, Lars; Holmegaard, Henriette T. – International Journal of Science Education, Part B: Communication and Public Engagement, 2023
Science capital has proved a valuable concept for understanding a person's science-related resources and the inequities linked to participation in science education. The concept was developed in the UK and has since been applied worldwide. In this paper, we investigate the potential of the concept in Denmark. Here science capital meets a concept…
Descriptors: Science Education, Role of Education, Human Capital, Equal Education
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Paton, Michael John – Science & Education, 2021
Fengshui was originally a methodology for nurture of both spirit and fertility based on the relationship between water, wind, and qi, and was first used in the selection of sites of habitation on the loess plateau of northern China. An analysis of this methodology for nurture of the physical is the purpose of this paper. Its prism is the history…
Descriptors: Science Education, Interior Design, Psychological Patterns, Philosophy
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Jan Jagodzinski – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2024
This essay is a plea to art educators in what is a global climate in a "permacrisis" both politically and physically. This is a deliberate and persuasive provocation to reorientate art education to avoid a reiteration that is taking place when the 20th and 21st centuries are compared in relation to the striking changes that are taking…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Change, History, Sciences
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Blancke, Stefaan; Boudry, Maarten – Science & Education, 2022
Modern democratic societies tend to appeal to the authority of science when dealing with important challenges and solving their problems. Nevertheless, distrust in science remains widespread among the public, and, as a result, scientific voices are often ignored or discarded in favour of other perspectives. Though superficially…
Descriptors: Sciences, Scientists, Scientific and Technical Information, Philosophy
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Swedberg, Richard – Sociological Methods & Research, 2021
This article addresses the following question: Can speculation be used in social science research or should this not be an option? The secondary literature on speculation, which is minimal, is presented and discussed. It is noted that natural scientists often differentiate between a scientific form of speculation and the old metaphysical form of…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Cognitive Processes, Philosophy, Natural Sciences
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Moura, Cristiano B.; Nascimento, Matheus Monteiro; Lima, Nathan Willig – Science & Education, 2021
Our purpose in this article is to discuss the roles for HPSS in Science Education considering the crisis of COVID-19, as well as to think what Science Education could look like beyond the pandemic. Considering the context of a pandemic as a starting point, we defend in this article the thesis that contours of public controversy involving COVID-19…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science and Society, COVID-19, Pandemics
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