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Noel Gough – Gender and Education, 2024
This essay offers a rationale for deploying ecofeminist science fiction stories as object-oriented thought experiments in science and environmental education, with particular reference to developments in genetics and evolutionary biology, and their implications for human (and more-than-human) reproduction and kinship in the period following the…
Descriptors: Imagination, Environmental Education, Feminism, Science Fiction
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Pierre Benz; Felix Bühlmann – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2024
The past decade has been marked by a series of global crises, presenting an opportunity to reevaluate the relationship between science and politics. The biological sciences are instrumental in understanding natural phenomena and informing policy decisions. However, scholars argue that current scientific expertise often fails to account for entire…
Descriptors: Evolution, Biology, Biological Sciences, Science and Society
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Benjamin D. Jee; Bryan J. Matlen; Monica Greenlaw; Nina Simms; Dedre Gentner – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2022
Images, such as photographs and diagrams, play an important role in the teaching and learning of science. To optimize student learning, educational science images should be designed to facilitate the cognitive processes relevant to comprehension. One such process is comparison, which involves aligning multiple representations on the basis of their…
Descriptors: Science Education, Textbooks, Illustrations, Visual Aids
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Jaimes, Patricia; Libarkin, Julie C.; Conrad, Dominik – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2020
While interdisciplinary collaboration is desired among researchers, traditional science instruction generally results in science disciplines being taught as separate entities. This study focuses on student understanding of concepts at the intersection of two isolated disciplines--geoscience and bioscience--across two purposeful samples of…
Descriptors: College Students, Knowledge Level, Scientific Concepts, Earth Science
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Apodaca, María José; McInerney, Joseph D.; Sala, Osvaldo E.; Katinas, Liliana; Crisci, Jorge V. – American Biology Teacher, 2019
Is it possible to teach biology without mentioning evolution? The answer is yes, but it is not possible for students to understand biology without the evolutionary context on which the meaning and intellectual value of biological concepts depend. Meaningful learning of evolution requires (1) that the students incorporate new knowledge into a…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, Evolution, Scientific Concepts
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Archila, Pablo Antonio; Molina, Jorge – Research in Science Education, 2020
The theory of evolution is the backbone of the biological sciences. Arguably, this is the reason why evolution education is an extensively investigated issue in several countries around the world. Little is known, however, about the views of university students in Colombia. Here, we report on 7 years of data generated by a three-question anonymous…
Descriptors: Evolution, Creationism, Student Attitudes, College Students
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Durán, Pablo A.; Marshall, Jill A. – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2019
The purpose of this study was to investigate the mathematical needs of biological sciences undergraduate students. Student needs were measured through a needs assessment methodology scheme that included a content analysis of peer-reviewed journals, a nationwide cross-sectional survey, and semi-structured interviews. The research question that…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Undergraduate Students, Needs Assessment, Student Needs
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Gutierrez, Stephanie; Rubin, Emily; Inskeep, David; Bernal, Ximena E. – Science Activities: Projects and Curriculum Ideas in STEM Classrooms, 2019
Understanding the nature of science has long been a focus of science education reform efforts, including the Next Generation of Science Standards. Students' views about the process of how scientific knowledge is acquired has been shown to affect their ability to learn scientific concepts. Integrating the nature of science into science lesson plans…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Scientific Enterprise, Science Education, Scientific Concepts
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Cooper, Robert A. – Journal of Biological Education, 2017
Student reasoning about cases of natural selection is often plagued by errors that stem from miscategorising selection as a direct, causal process, misunderstanding the role of randomness, and from the intuitive ideas of intentionality, teleology and essentialism. The common thread throughout many of these reasoning errors is a failure to apply…
Descriptors: Science Process Skills, Misconceptions, Ecology, Evolution
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Lamm, Ehud – International Journal of Developmental Science, 2013
Technological and methodological advances, in particular next-generation sequencing and chromatin profiling, has led to a deluge of data on epigenetic mechanisms and processes. Epigenetic regulation in the brain is no exception. In this commentary, Ehud Lamm writes that extending existing frameworks for thinking about psychological development to…
Descriptors: Genetics, Developmental Psychology, Biological Sciences, Evolution
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Kazama, Tomoko; Ogawa, Masakata – International Journal of Science Education, Part B: Communication and Public Engagement, 2015
Life exhibitions in Japanese science museums (SMs) face difficulties in coping with rapid progress in the life sciences owing to certain constraints around the frequency of exhibit renovations, and the Japanese indigenous understanding of the natural world (Shizen) that Japanese visitors unconsciously bring with them. To what extent do current…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Content Analysis, Biological Sciences, Exhibits
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Xu, Dongchen; Chi, Michelene T. H. – Universal Journal of Educational Research, 2016
Students often have misconceptions about natural selection as they misuse a direct causal schema to explain the process. Natural selection is in fact an emergent process where random interactions lead to changes in a population. The misconceptions stem from students' lack of emergent schema for natural selection. In order to help students…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Evolution
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Pigliucci, Massimo – Science & Education, 2013
It is an unfortunate fact of academic life that there is a sharp divide between science and philosophy, with scientists often being openly dismissive of philosophy, and philosophers being equally contemptuous of the naivete of scientists when it comes to the philosophical underpinnings of their own discipline. In this paper I explore the…
Descriptors: Sciences, Religion, Conflict, Philosophy
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Peterson, Jacob – American Biology Teacher, 2014
A logical question to be expected from students: "How could life develop, that is, change, evolve from simple, primitive organisms into the complex forms existing today, while at the same time there is a generally observed decline and disorganization--the second law of thermodynamics?" The explanations in biology textbooks relied upon by…
Descriptors: Evolution, Scientific Concepts, Biological Sciences, Scientific and Technical Information
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Jördens, Janina; Asshoff, Roman; Kullmann, Harald; Hammann, Marcus – International Journal of Science Education, 2016
Students' explanations of biological phenomena are frequently characterized by disconnects between levels and confusion of levels. The purpose of this research is to investigate the effects of a hands-on lab activity that aims at fostering the ability to reason across levels. A total of 197 students (18 years of age) participated in a randomized,…
Descriptors: Evolution, Foreign Countries, Science Instruction, Science Education
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