NotesFAQContact Us
Collection
Advanced
Search Tips
Source
Science & Education73
Audience
Teachers1
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Showing 46 to 60 of 73 results Save | Export
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tala, Suvi – Science & Education, 2013
The content of the expertise which young natural scientists try to gain by doing science in research groups is a relatively little-explored subject. What makes learning in such settings challenging is that a central part of the expertise is tacit. This study employs empirical methods together with a contextualized approach and interdisciplinary…
Descriptors: Scientific Research, Science Education, Expertise, Scientists
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Thalos, Mariam – Science & Education, 2013
Chemistry possesses a distinctive theoretical lens--a distinctive set of theoretical concerns regarding the dynamics and transformations of a perplexing variety of organic and nonorganic substances--to which it must be faithful. Even if it is true that chemical facts bear a special (reductive) relationship to physical facts, nonetheless it will…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Chemistry, Teaching Methods, Theories
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Allen, Garland E. – Science & Education, 2015
Science textbooks and classes mostly emphasize what are considered by today's standards the "right" or "correct" interpretations of particular phenomena or processes. When "incorrect" ideas of the past are mentioned at all, it is simply to point out their errors, with little attention as to why the ideas were put…
Descriptors: Genetics, Evolution, Scientists, Scientific Methodology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Smith, Mike U.; Gericke, Niklas M. – Science & Education, 2015
Mendel is an icon in the history of genetics and part of our common culture and modern biology instruction. The aim of this paper is to summarize the place of Mendel in the modern biology classroom. In the present article we will identify key issues that make Mendel relevant in the classroom today. First, we recount some of the historical…
Descriptors: Genetics, Biology, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Science Instruction
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tampakis, Konstantinos – Science & Education, 2013
In this paper, I describe the strong and reciprocal relations between the emergence of the specialized expert in the natural sciences and the establishment of science education, in early Modern Greece. Accordingly, I show how science and public education interacted within the Greek state from its inception in the early 1830, to the first decade of…
Descriptors: Science Education, Scientific Research, Educational Theories, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Burgin, Stephen R.; Alonzo, Jenifer; Hill, Victoria J. – Science & Education, 2016
This article focuses on the impact of a professional play that we developed in order to introduce elementary learners of an urban school to the research of a scientist working at a local university. The play was written in a way that might increase student understandings of the nature of science, scientific inquiry, the identity of scientists, and…
Descriptors: Theater Arts, Drama, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Binns, Ian C.; Bell, Randy L. – Science & Education, 2015
This study explored how eight widely used secondary science textbooks described scientific methodology and to what degree the textbooks' examples and investigations were consistent with this description. Data consisted of all text from student and teacher editions that referred to scientific methodology and all investigations. Analysis used an…
Descriptors: Scientific Methodology, Secondary School Science, Textbook Content, Textbook Evaluation
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Peacock, Margaret – Science & Education, 2015
The demise of Soviet genetics in the 1930s, 40s, and 50s has stood for many as a prime example of the damage that social and political dogmatism can do when allowed to meddle in the workings of science. In particular, the story of Trofim Lysenko's rise to preeminence and the fall of Mendelian genetics in the Soviet Union has become a lasting…
Descriptors: Genetics, Biology, Scientists, Political Influences
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Svoboda, Julia; Passmore, Cynthia – Science & Education, 2013
Modeling, like inquiry more generally, is not a single method, but rather a complex suite of strategies. Philosophers of biology, citing the diverse aims, interests, and disciplinary cultures of biologists, argue that modeling is best understood in the context of its epistemic aims and cognitive payoffs. In the science education literature,…
Descriptors: Biology, Models, Science Education, Educational Strategies
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Bunge, Mario – Science & Education, 2011
Pseudoscience is error, substantive or methodological, parading as science. Obvious examples are parapsychology, "intelligent design," and homeopathy. Psychoanalysis and pop evolutionary psychology are less obvious, yet no less flawed in both method and doctrine. The fact that science can be faked to the point of deceiving science lovers suggests…
Descriptors: Evolution, Psychiatry, Research Proposals, Evaluation Criteria
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Takacs, Peter; Ruse, Michael – Science & Education, 2013
The philosophy of biology today is one of the most exciting areas of philosophy. It looks critically across the life sciences, teasing out conceptual issues and difficulties bringing to bear the tools of philosophical analysis to achieve clarification and understanding. This essay surveys work in all of the major directions of research:…
Descriptors: Ecology, Ethics, Evolution, Biology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Kipnis, Nahum – Science & Education, 2011
This paper analyses the real origin and nature of scientific errors against claims of science critics, by examining a number of examples from the history of electricity and optics. This analysis leads to a conclusion that errors are a natural and unavoidable part of scientific process. If made available to students, through their science teachers,…
Descriptors: Optics, Science Teachers, Science Education, Energy
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tweney, Ryan D. – Science & Education, 2011
James Clerk Maxwell "translated" Michael Faraday's experimentally-based field theory into the mathematical representation now known as "Maxwell's Equations." Working with a variety of mathematical representations and physical models Maxwell extended the reach of Faraday's theory and brought it into consistency with other…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Physics, Long Term Memory, Equations (Mathematics)
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Quale, Andreas – Science & Education, 2011
The association between the observable physical world and the mathematical models used in theoretical physics to describe this world is examined. Such models will frequently exhibit solutions that are "unexpected," in the sense that they describe physical situations which are different from that which the physicist may initially have had in mind…
Descriptors: Constructivism (Learning), Mathematical Models, Physics, Epistemology
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Direct linkDirect link
Tala, Suvi – Science & Education, 2011
In physics, the borderline between pure science and technology is increasingly diffuse. Physics can be seen as technoscience, a merged scientific and technological enterprise. The notion of technoscience has emerged from studies in the philosophy of science and sociology of science, and also seems to arise quite naturally in discussions with…
Descriptors: Expertise, Scientific Methodology, Physics, Intellectual Disciplines
Pages: 1  |  2  |  3  |  4  |  5