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Showing 1 to 15 of 84 results Save | Export
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Klopfer, Leo E.; Aikenhead, Glen S. – Science Education, 2022
This article offers a retrospective synopsis of 70 years of development of a humanistic approach to science education. Instruction using the history of science, for example, provides a rich context for students to learn not only canonical science content on a need-to-know basis, but also content from the other domains of humanistic science…
Descriptors: Humanistic Education, Science Education, Educational History, Science History
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Earley, Joseph E., Sr. – Science & Education, 2013
"The idea of nature" (general model of how things work) that is accepted in a society strongly influences that group's social and technological progress. Currently, science education concentrates on "analysis" of stable pre-existing items to minimum constituents. This emphasis is consistent with an outlook that has been…
Descriptors: Science Education, Science and Society, Chemistry, World Views
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Seker, Hayati – Educational Sciences: Theory and Practice, 2012
This paper discusses the levels of The Instructional Model for Using History of Science (UHOS) to explain the relationship between the history of science and science teaching. The UHOS model proposes four levels: Conceptual Level, Epistemological Level, Sociocultural Level, and Interest Level. Each Level has sublevels with regards to types of…
Descriptors: Science History, Science Instruction, Relationship, Science and Society
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Read, Andrew F. – Journal of General Education, 2013
General education must develop in students an appreciation of the power of science, how it works, why it is an effective knowledge generation tool, and what it can deliver. Knowing what science has discovered is desirable but less important.
Descriptors: General Education, Higher Education, Educational Objectives, Science and Society
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Elzinga, Aant – Minerva: A Review of Science, Learning and Policy, 2012
When the journal "Minerva" was founded in 1962, science and higher educational issues were high on the agenda, lending impetus to the interdisciplinary field of "Science Studies" "qua" "Science Policy Studies." As government expenditures for promoting various branches of science increased dramatically on…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Periodicals, International Organizations, Measurement Techniques
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Devisch, Oswald; Veestraeten, Daniel – Journal of Urban Technology, 2013
Citizen science is a term used to describe the engagement of ordinary citizens in scientific tasks like observation, measurement, and computation. A series of technological innovations, such as the Internet, the upgrade of mobile phones from communication devices to networked mobile personal measurement devices, and the introduction of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Telecommunications, Handheld Devices, Influence of Technology
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Li, Yan – International Education Studies, 2009
Genetics is the important specialized course of bioscience and whether exordium is taught wonderfully or not plays the important and pivotal role. Well teaching exordium class may stimulate students, deep interest and intense desire for knowledge in this class. This text, according to teaching experience and taste, puts forward several teaching…
Descriptors: Genetics, Student Interests, Science Instruction, Biology
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Glick, Thomas F. – Science & Education, 2010
The subfield of Darwin studies devoted to comparative reception coalesced around 1971 with the planning of a conference on the subject, at the University of Texas at Austin held in April 1972. The original focus was western Europe, Russia and the United States. Subsequently a spate of studies on the Italian reception added to the Eurocentric…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Trends, Evolution, Science Education
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Lapp, David R. – Physics Teacher, 2010
This paper provides examples of naturally radioactive items that are likely to be found in most communities. Additionally, there is information provided on how to acquire many of these items inexpensively. I have found that the presence of these materials in the classroom is not only useful for teaching about nuclear radiation and debunking the…
Descriptors: Radiation, Business, Science Instruction, Science Activities
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Fabbrizzi, Luigi – Journal of Chemical Education, 2008
Modern chemists know that alchemists were their historical predecessors, yet they are not proud of this relationship, which chemists today tend to hide or forget. However, no discontinuity exists between alchemy and chemistry and we still use laboratory techniques that were invented by alchemists hundreds or thousands of years ago. Alchemists used…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Instruction, Science Laboratories, Scientific Methodology
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Roberts, Lissa – Science & Education, 2007
This essay details a public display of four steam engine models assembled in a Leiden orphanage courtyard in 1777. By examining the multiple purposes to which these engines were and could be put, alongside the various interests, goals and interpretations of their inventors, instructors and audience, the notion of a clear division between public…
Descriptors: Science History, Demonstrations (Educational), Engines, Scientific Concepts
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Matthews, Michael R. – Science & Education, 2009
This paper elaborates on the life and publications of Joseph Priestley, the eighteenth-century polymath. The paper outlines his particular place in the European Enlightenment; it stresses the importance of philosophy and worldview in his scientific work on pneumatic chemistry, the composition of air, and his discovery of the process of…
Descriptors: Science History, Botany, Science Instruction, Science Education
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Durand, Charles X. – Critical Inquiry in Language Studies, 2008
This article first attempts to supply a definition of peoples' identity as scientific as possible and takes a close look at the conditions that make creativity possible. The study of science history clearly indicates that the periods of great creativity were those when communication was sufficient to make remote partners stimulate one another but…
Descriptors: Science and Society, Science History, Global Approach, World History
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Eckert, Michael – Science & Education, 2007
Hydraulics is an engineering specialty and largely neglected as a topic in physics teaching. But the history of hydraulics from the Renaissance to the Baroque, merits our attention because hydraulics was then more broadly conceived as a practical "and" theoretical science; it served as a constant bone of contention for mechanics and…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Water, Hydraulics, Physics
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Jenkins, Edgar – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2007
I explore the emergence of science and scientific method as political constructs in the 19th century and argue that the associated rhetoric continues to have significant consequences for contemporary school science education. It allows science to be promoted as a coherent curriculum component and fosters an untenable but enduring notion of a…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Science Education, Scientific Literacy, Science History
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