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Showing 1 to 15 of 254 results Save | Export
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Jessica Watkins; Natalie A. De Lucca; Serena R. Pao – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Preservice secondary science teachers often experience science learning in narrow and marginalizing ways in their science preparation. These experiences cause harm, particularly for preservice teachers of color. They also limit the disciplinary resources they can develop for later teaching science in ways that value and sustain their students'…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Science Teachers, Secondary School Teachers, Science Education
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Ariel Chasen; Hannah Chapman Tripp; Maura Borrego – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
We present a systematic review of 29 empirical studies on disability and fieldwork in natural science, postsecondary educational settings. Undergraduate students with disabilities are underrepresented in STEM, and disciplines requiring major field components are some of the least diverse, at least in part because fieldwork has been traditionally…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Undergraduate Students, STEM Education, Field Instruction
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Alvir S. Sangha; Dermot F. Donnelly-Hermosillo; Frederick P. Nelson – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Phenomena-based approaches have become popular for elementary school teachers to engage children's innate curiosity in the natural world. However, integrating such phenomena-based approaches in existing science courses within teacher education programs present potential challenges for both preservice elementary teachers (PSETs) and for laboratory…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Personality Traits, Elementary School Students, Science Education
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Günter, Katerina Pia; Ahnesjö, Ingrid; Gullberg, Annica – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023
Higher education biology is often imagined, perceived, and described as having reached gender equality in terms of who gets to participate in disciplinary practices. However, like any other natural science discipline, higher education biology is a world whose landscapes are shaped by (re)productions of historical, cultural, and social norms. We…
Descriptors: College Science, Biology, Cultural Influences, Social Influences
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Dustin S. J. Van Orman; Josie Melton; Daniel Hanley; Katherine E. Castellano; Jamie N. Mikeska; Deborah Hanuscin; Emily Borda – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
Knowledge of science content and the ability to translate knowledge into effective teaching is known as teachers' "content knowledge for teaching" (CKT). Teachers with developed CKT are able to more effectively determine instructional and assessment activities that will deepen K-12 students' scientific literacy. However, preservice…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Preservice Teachers, Pedagogical Content Knowledge, Elementary School Science
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Tom Bielik; Moritz Krell – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
In science education, epistemic vigilance plays a key role in the development of students' critical thinking by supporting students' abilities to evaluate the expertise level of the source and to evaluate the claim itself, using rigorous scientific standards and appropriate argumentation heuristics. Based on previous studies, which suggested two…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Science Education, Science Process Skills, Skill Development
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Sharday N. Ewell; Alayna Harvey; Amanda Clark; Megan E. Maloney; Laurie S. Stevison; Cissy J. Ballen – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
An inequitable distribution of resources and opportunities for marginalized students (i.e., opportunity gaps) leads to challenges in identifying effective study behaviors, metacognition, and academic help-seeking in higher education. While students benefit when these skills are taught explicitly through co-curricular workshops and courses, these…
Descriptors: Learning Strategies, Metacognition, Undergraduate Study, Undergraduate Students
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Gary William Wright; Cesar Delgado; K. Rende Mendoza – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Exploring how science teacher education programs can prepare science teachers to support gender and sexually diverse students remains an important area for research. A 5-week intervention was designed for pre-service science teachers' (PSSTs), addressing gender and sexual diversity (GSD). The effects of the intervention on PSSTs' attitudes and…
Descriptors: Preservice Teachers, Science Teachers, Teacher Attitudes, Intervention
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Guopeng Fu; Anthony Clarke – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Taking on an agentic perspective, this study employed a digital ethnographic approach to examine a science teacher's emotional experiences in an online graduate science education course during the COVID-19 pandemic. Veronika, the teacher, revealed her feelings of grievance and loss to the graduate course cohort at the advent of large-scale school…
Descriptors: Professional Autonomy, Online Courses, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Zahra Hazari; Idaykis Rodriguez – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
For students who face marginalization in a discipline, counterspaces are safe spaces of refuge that allow them to express their multiple identities and foster their sense of belonging. While prior qualitative work on counterspaces has highlighted how and why these spaces support marginalized students, there is little quantitative work that…
Descriptors: Physics, Gender Differences, Science Interests, Self Concept
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Lautaro Cabrera; Diane Jass Ketelhut; Kelly Mills; Heather Killen; Merijke Coenraad; Virginia L. Byrne; Jandelyn Dawn Plane – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
As professional science becomes increasingly computational, researchers and educators are advocating for the integration of computational thinking (CT) into science education. Researchers and policymakers have argued that CT learning opportunities should begin in elementary school and span across the K-12 grades. While researchers and policymakers…
Descriptors: Computer Science Education, Thinking Skills, Science Education, Elementary School Students
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Benjamin C. Herman; Sarah Poor; Michael P. Clough; Asha Rao; Aaron Kidd; Daniel De Jesús; Davis Varghese – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Informed scientific thinking is a vital component of engaging all socioscientific issues (SSI) such as climate change and the COVID-19 pandemic. However, socioscientific engagement may be influenced by sociocultural factors and mis/disinformation efforts to the widespread detriment of human and environmental well-being. The purpose of this…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Undergraduate Students, Beliefs, Misinformation
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Ralph, Vanessa R.; Scharlott, Leah J.; Schwarz, Cara E.; Becker, Nicole M.; Stowe, Ryan L. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2022
Many conversations surrounding improvement of large-enrollment college science, technology, engineering & mathematics (STEM) courses focus primarily (or solely) on changing instructional practices. By reducing dynamic, complex learning environments to collections of teaching methods, we neglect other meaningful parts of a course ecosystem…
Descriptors: Large Group Instruction, Science Instruction, Chemistry, Educational Environment
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Bader, Jordan D.; Ahearn, Kelsey A.; Allen, Beverly A.; Anand, Diya M.; Coppens, Andrew D.; Aikens, Melissa L. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023
Controversial scientific issues, or socioscientific issues (SSIs), demand the consideration of more than scientific content when constructing decisions. The Justification for Knowing framework (JFK) was developed to categorize the information sources drawn upon when making SSI decisions within the academic domain of natural sciences. These…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Science and Society, Controversial Issues (Course Content), Evaluative Thinking
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Fischer, Christian; Witherspoon, Eben; Nguyen, Ha; Feng, Yanan; Fiorini, Stefano; Vincent-Ruz, Paulette; Mead, Chris; Bork Rodriguez, William Nicholas; Matz, Rebecca L.; Schunn, Christian – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023
Approximately 2 million students take Advanced Placement (AP) examinations annually. However, departmental policies that allow students to replace introductory courses with AP credit greatly vary within and across universities, even across relatively similar universities. This study examines the impact of AP credit policies on second-course…
Descriptors: Advanced Placement, Undergraduate Students, Credits, Educational Policy
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