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Allgaier, Joachim – Science & Education, 2010
The issue whether creationist accounts of the origins of life should be taught in science education alongside or even instead Darwin's theory of evolution is controversial in many countries. In 2002 there was a controversy around teaching creationism in science classes at a secondary school in England. The research presented in this paper uses…
Descriptors: Creationism, Foreign Countries, Science Education, Expertise
Plutynski, Anya – Science & Education, 2010
A variety of different arguments have been offered for teaching "both sides" of the evolution/ID debate in public schools. This article reviews five of the most common types of arguments advanced by proponents of Intelligent Design and demonstrates how and why they are founded on confusion and misunderstanding. It argues on behalf of teaching…
Descriptors: Evolution, Public Schools, Persuasive Discourse, Discourse Analysis
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
Matthews, Michael R. – Science & Education, 2009
A common feature of contemporary science education curricula is the expectation that as well as learning science content, students will learn something "about" science--its nature, its history, how it differs from non-scientific endeavours, and its interactions with culture and society. These curricular pronouncements provide an "open cheque" for…
Descriptors: Science Teachers, Science Instruction, Sciences, Science Curriculum
Peker, Deniz; Comert, Gulsum Gul; Kence, Aykut – Science & Education, 2010
Even though in the early years of the Republic of Turkey Darwin's theory of evolution was treated as a scientific theory and taught fairly in schools, despite all the substantial evidence accumulated supporting the theory of evolution since then, Darwin and his ideas today have been scorned by curriculum and education policy makers. Furthermore,…
Descriptors: Evolution, Foreign Countries, Undergraduate Students, Educational Policy
Zemplen, Gabor A. – Science & Education, 2009
Contrasting two examples from 2005, a creationism-trial and a recent textbook, the article shows two different ways of employing social considerations to demarcate science from non-science. Drawing conclusions from the comparison, and citing some of the leading proponents of science studies, the paper argues for a novel perspective in teaching…
Descriptors: Sociology, Textbooks, Epistemology, Scientific Attitudes
Roberts, Lissa L. – Science & Education, 2012
One of the two most extensive instrument collections in the Netherlands during the second half of the eighteenth century--rivaling the much better known collection at the University of Leiden--belonged to an orphanage in The Hague that was specially established to mold hand-picked orphans into productive citizens. (The other was housed at the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Education, Citizenship, Educational Philosophy
Kolsto, Stein Dankert – Science & Education, 2008
Scholars have argued that the history of science might facilitate an understanding of processes of science. Focusing on science education for citizenship and active involvement in debates on socioscientific issues, one might argue that today's post-academic science differs from academic science in the past, making the history of academic science…
Descriptors: Science History, Citizenship, Democracy, Democratic Values
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
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
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
Pinnick, Cassandra L. – Science & Education, 2008
This paper examines the relation between situated cognition theory in science education, and feminist standpoint theory in philosophy of science. It shows that situated cognition is an idea borrowed from a long since discredited philosophy of science. It argues that feminist standpoint theory ought not be indulged as it is a failed challenge to…
Descriptors: Feminism, Women Scientists, Science and Society, Science Education
Reiss, Michael – Science & Education, 2008
There has been a move in recent years towards the greater inclusion of social and ethical issues within science courses. This paper examines a new context-based course for 16-18 year-olds (Salters-Nuffield Advanced Biology) who are studying biology in England and Wales. The course is taught through contexts and has an emphasis on social issues and…
Descriptors: Biology, Foreign Countries, Ethics, Science and Society
Rolin, Kristina – Science & Education, 2008
Physics education reform movements should pay attention to feminist analyses of gender in the culture of physics for two reasons. One reason is that feminist analyses contribute to an understanding of a "chilly climate" women encounter in many physics university departments. Another reason is that feminist analyses reveal that certain styles of…
Descriptors: Feminism, Physics, Educational Change, Epistemology
Weinstein, Matthew – Science & Education, 2008
With an eye towards a potential scientific ethics curriculum, this paper examines four contrasting discourses regarding the ethics of using human subjects in science. The first two represent official statements regarding ethics. These include the U.S.'s National Science Education Standards, that identify ethics with a professional code, and the…
Descriptors: War, Ethics, Science Education, Science Instruction