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Chowdhuri, Meghna Nag; King, Heather; Godec, Spela; Archer, Louise – London Review of Education, 2023
While several initiatives for justice-oriented pedagogies have been developed and implemented over the years, there is limited understanding of the ways in which teachers, and their practice, are impacted by these. This article presents data documenting the impact of a pedagogical approach -- the science capital teaching approach -- on a cohort of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Science Education
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Christodoulou, Andri; Levinson, Ralph; Davies, Paul; Grace, Marcus; Nicholl, Joanne; Rietdijk, Willeke – International Journal of Science Education, 2021
This qualitative study examines the pedagogical potential that a Cartography of Controversy (CoC) approach has in enabling secondary school students to unravel the complexity of socioscientific issues and to communicate about them. The aim was to examine the types of knowledge and the ways in which students approached uncertainty when asked to…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science and Society, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Secondary School Students
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Vidal, Michel; Simonneaux, Jean; Levinson, Ralph – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
Socio-scientific issues and socially acute questions enable moral judgement through rational, emotional, intuitive and imaginative thinkings. Our research focuses more specifically on the place of the myth in student discussions about controversial issues. We have analysed the mythemes expressed through online exchanges between students from…
Descriptors: Science and Society, Mythology, Critical Thinking, Computer Mediated Communication
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McLain, Matt; Irving-Bell, Dawne; Wooff, David; Morrison-Love, David – Design and Technology Education, 2019
Design and technology (D&T) emerged from a very different education context than it finds itself in today. D&T was to be included in the National Curriculum for England because it was perceived that what children learnt from design and technological activity could not be learnt in another way (DES/WO, 1988). Furthermore, it connected a…
Descriptors: Design, Technology, National Curriculum, Technology Education
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Dunlop, Lynda; Veneu, Fernanda – Science & Education, 2019
Controversies in science are an essential feature of scientific practice: defined here as current problems that are unresolved because there are no accepted procedures by which they can be resolved or there are differing assumptions that affect the interpretation of evidence. Although there has been much attention in science education literature…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science Education, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Science and Society
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Gandolfi, Haira Emanuela – Curriculum Journal, 2021
Recent 'decolonising the curriculum' movements have called for Higher Education to rethink how it engages with diversity and colonialism in its lectures and syllabi. But what can these ideas mean for science subjects in secondary schools? Grounded on a decolonial perspective around the Science and Technology Studies (STS) field, this paper…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, National Curriculum
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Lawson, Finley; Hunt, Megan; Goodwin, Daniel; Colley, Stefan – School Science Review, 2020
This article examines the impact that an 'epistemically insightful' approach to informal science learning can have on students' attitudes, aspirations and perceptions of STEM subjects. It uses interim findings from a research and outreach project, including sustained Saturday activity programmes for ages 14-16 and residential summer schools for…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Scientific Attitudes, Epistemology, Questioning Techniques
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McLain, Matt; Irving-Bell, Dawne; Wooff, David; Morrison-Love, David – Curriculum Journal, 2019
In the context of curriculum change within English education, and beyond, this article explores the cultural historical roots of design and technology as an educational construct, distinct from design or engineering, which exist as career paths outside of the school curriculum. It is a position piece, drawing on literature from a wide range of…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Curriculum Development, Design, Technology Education
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Tyler, Toby; Vanstone, Emma – Primary Science, 2017
In this article, first Toby Tyler describes how using Twitter to engage the community and to pursue the ICE principle (Introduce, Consolidate, and Extend) to enhance learning has brought his school community closer together. Then, Emma Vanstone highlights how schools can draw on support for engaging children with science at home by using social…
Descriptors: Social Media, Mass Media Use, Science and Society, Science Activities
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Morris, Helen – School Science Review, 2014
Socio-scientific issues, which are often controversial, involve the use of science and are of interest to society, raising ethical and moral dilemmas. Examples of these issues could include genetic technology or air pollution. Following a curriculum reform in England in 2006, socioscientific issues now have a heightened presence in the 14-16…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Females, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Science and Society
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Archer, Louise; Dawson, Emily; DeWitt, Jennifer; Seakins, Amy; Wong, Billy – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2015
This paper sets out an argument and approach for moving beyond a primarily arts-based conceptualization of cultural capital, as has been the tendency within Bourdieusian approaches to date. We advance the notion that, in contemporary society, scientific forms of cultural and social capital can command a high symbolic and exchange value. Our…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Cultural Capital, Social Capital, Science and Society
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Grace, Marcus; Lee, Yeung Chung; Asshoff, Roman; Wallin, Anita – International Journal of Science Education, 2015
This paper focuses on the views of 16-17-year-old science students from England, Germany, Hong Kong and Sweden on whale hunting, and their perceptions of the views of their international counterparts. The students were all provided with the same decision-making task, discussed the issue in small groups and then presented their views on video,…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Adolescents, Secondary School Science
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Donnelly, Jim; Ryder, Jim – History of Education, 2011
This paper is concerned with the recent history of science curriculum reform in England, though it traces these developments back to the mid-nineteenth century. It first reviews approaches to science in the curriculum until the mid-1960s, identifying the curricular settlement of the postwar years and the beginning of the so-called "swing from…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Curriculum, Curriculum Development, Educational History
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Smith, David – History of Education, 2008
The building of the English new universities during the 1960s symbolized the liberating possibilities of higher education. New institutions for a new age, their campuses were arguably part of a wider "utopianist" movement for community that sought to challenge academic elitism and conservatism. This paper considers the era of university…
Descriptors: Higher Education, Democracy, Ideology, Educational Policy
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Eady, Sandra – British Journal of Educational Studies, 2008
The paper explores the current rationale for primary science in England with a focus on how competing perspectives arising from perceptions of educational ideology and policy discourse have helped to shape current practice. The aim will be to provide a conceptual understanding of this by focusing specifically on how policy has influenced practice.…
Descriptors: Teacher Education, Foreign Countries, Science Education, Educational Policy
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