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Seul-gi Lee; Buhm Soon Park – Science & Education, 2025
No scientific concept in the twenty-first century has garnered more attention from scholars outside the scientific community than the Anthropocene. Despite the official rejection by the geological community in March 2024 of the proposal for an Anthropocene Epoch as a formal unit of the Geological Time Scale, it is expected to remain an invaluable…
Descriptors: Climate, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
Clabaugh Howell, Kaela; Holt, Emily A. – Science Education, 2024
Undergraduate biology educators strive to understand how to best teach students the concepts of climate change. The root of this understanding is the establishment of what students know about climate change. This research aims to describe undergraduate biology students' conceptions of climate change and their argument practices and associated…
Descriptors: College Science, Biology, Climate, Undergraduate Students
Manz, Eve; Beckert, Betsy – Science & Education, 2023
Changing where, when, and how objects are studied is central to lab-based science (Knorr Cetina, 1999). Science involves changing the scale of objects--particularly scales of size, time, and intensity--from what is experienced in the world. Similar to investigations conducted in science laboratories, classroom investigations involve…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Elementary School Students, Heat, Scientific Concepts
Sophia Jeong; Elena H. Silverman – ECNU Review of Education, 2025
Purpose: This study draws on Bruno Latour's work, "Down to Earth: Politics in the New Climatic Regime," to re-imagine issues of climate change in K-12 science teaching and learning. "Re-turning" to a dwelling place can become an investigation, while issues of gender, race, education, food, technology, and religion can be…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Science Instruction, Geographic Location
Melissa Hanke; Hannes Schmalor – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
Climate change education is a challenge for teachers, as they must have appropriate content knowledge to teach the topic adequately. Every teacher is confronted with both their own knowledge and non-knowledge, as well as with scientific knowledge and non-knowledge. The uncertainty about this knowledge depends on individual perception and can have…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preservice Teachers, Climate, Ecology
Johan Nelson; Clas Olander – Journal of Biological Education, 2024
This study investigated meaning-making of arrows in a representation of the greenhouse effect among 14-year-old secondary school students. Data was generated during Biology lessons where 74 students discussed how they interpreted a representation from the Swedish Society for Nature Conservation, which is an NGO that produce school material. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Secondary School Students, Biology, Science Instruction
Shelley Rap; Ron Blonder – Journal of Science Education and Technology, 2025
Climate change is a pressing global challenge for humanity, which should be adequately represented in the educational system. However, teachers face a significant challenge due to the vast amount of data and information about climate change available in the media. We aimed to identify aspects that affect teachers' acceptance of technology in…
Descriptors: Climate, Chemistry, Science Teachers, Motor Vehicles
Hunter Michael Craig – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The threat of climate change makes it increasingly important for biologists and the public to understand how organisms respond to temperature. The Metabolic Theory of Ecology (MTE) predicts that temperature should affect organism performance, with implications for species interactions and ecosystems that span disciplines including mathematics,…
Descriptors: Climate, Metabolism, Animals, Science Laboratories
Henry Jakubowski; Nicholas Bock – American Biology Teacher, 2024
Climate change caused predominately by carbon dioxide (CO2) from fossil fuel use is a critical issue for our future. It is incumbent on science educators to learn about it and teach it in ways that illustrate the power of science to understand climatic changes and model past, present, and possible climate futures. It is equally important for…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, Climate, Teaching Methods
Cerian Gibbes – Geography Teacher, 2023
This article presents an introduction to the use of remote sensing for the study of climate-land interactions. The article begins with a brief review of current climate change knowledge and then examines the bidirectional relationship within climate-land interactions. Using select examples from the scientific literature, the article discusses the…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Physical Sciences, Science Instruction
Kimberly Carroll Steward; David Gosselin; Devarati Bhattacharya; Mark Chandler; Cory T. Forbes – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2025
Foregrounding climate education in formal science learning environments provides students with opportunities to develop critical climate-related knowledge and skills. However, research has shown many challenges to teaching and learning about Earth's climate and global climate change (GCC). This longitudinal study aims to establish how secondary…
Descriptors: Climate, Ecology, Environmental Education, Longitudinal Studies
Charity E. Flener Lovitt; Miriam Bertram; Dana Campbell; Avery Cook Shinneman; Martha Groom; Deborah Hathaway; Amy Lambert; Grace A. Lasker – Journal of Chemical Education, 2025
In the face of accelerating climate change, effective education is paramount to fostering informed citizens and enacting meaningful action. Effective climate instruction contextualizes content so that students are engaged emotionally (affect) and can translate science into action. This paper describes six courses that use integrated approaches to…
Descriptors: Climate, Environmental Education, Integrated Curriculum, Science Education
Puttick, Steven; Talks, Isobel – Curriculum Journal, 2022
This paper sheds light on an important and under-researched issue: The sources of information about climate change that teachers use. Utilising a 'scoping review' methodological approach, we analysed over 600 papers to address two main questions: What sources of information about climate change are teachers using? In what ways are teachers using…
Descriptors: Information Sources, Climate, Environmental Education, Teachers
Rodgers, Ben – Primary Science, 2022
When any object, such as a glass of water, a greenhouse or the Earth's atmosphere, stays at a steady temperature, the amount of energy entering the object is equal to the amount of energy leaving it. This is considered in equilibrium. This equilibrium changes when the amount of energy entering does not equal the amount of energy leaving.…
Descriptors: Elementary School Science, Science Instruction, Climate, Energy
Todd P. Silverstein – Journal of Chemical Education, 2022
The inexorable rise in atmospheric carbon dioxide impacts not only global warming but also the acidity of the ocean. Increasing ocean acidity causes a decline in carbonate (as it is protonated), which in turn will negatively impact the ability of calcifying marine organisms to build their calcium carbonate shells. A simple set of equilibrium…
Descriptors: College Freshmen, Chemistry, Science Instruction, Climate