Publication Date
In 2025 | 1 |
Since 2024 | 3 |
Since 2021 (last 5 years) | 16 |
Since 2016 (last 10 years) | 80 |
Since 2006 (last 20 years) | 409 |
Descriptor
Source
Author
Publication Type
Education Level
Audience
Practitioners | 599 |
Policymakers | 207 |
Teachers | 200 |
Researchers | 168 |
Administrators | 67 |
Community | 13 |
Students | 8 |
Media Staff | 4 |
Parents | 3 |
Location
United Kingdom | 85 |
United Kingdom (Great Britain) | 79 |
Australia | 58 |
Canada | 39 |
United States | 29 |
China | 21 |
United Kingdom (England) | 21 |
Japan | 17 |
India | 13 |
USSR | 12 |
Africa | 10 |
More ▼ |
Laws, Policies, & Programs
Assessments and Surveys
National Assessment of… | 5 |
Trends in International… | 5 |
Draw a Person Test | 1 |
Program for International… | 1 |
SAT (College Admission Test) | 1 |
What Works Clearinghouse Rating
Chubin, Daryl E. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2023
This article is a personal reflection on borderlands as a professional home. Researchers who find themselves beyond their home discipline, i.e., the one in which they have been credentialed, have tried to assign terms for their location and its psychological ramifications. Defying an intellectual lane is to traverse a boundary that is constricted…
Descriptors: Science Education, Novices, Decision Making, Community
Bruce V. Lewenstein; Ayelet Baram-Tsabari – International Journal of Science Education, Part B: Communication and Public Engagement, 2024
In this response, we summarize the affirmations, extensions, and critiques of the framework for science communication training that we presented in Lewenstein and Baram-Tsabari (2022. How should we organize science communication trainings to achieve competencies? "International Journal of Science Education -- Part B: Communication and Public…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Science Education, Communication Skills, Training
Mpofu, Vongai – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2022
In this commentary, I consider several theoretical and methodological aspects of Nadaraji Govender and Edson Mudzamiri's study. The commentary starts with an examination of the purpose for making physics understandable to learners of indigenous background and decolonization of school physics in Govender and Mudzamiri. Next, I offer an alternative…
Descriptors: Physics, Indigenous Knowledge, Indigenous Populations, Science Education
Leonard, Simon – Teaching Science, 2021
The Waterhouse Natural Science Art Prize is organised by the Museum of South Australia each year, with the winning works typically touring to other states. Named after the founder of the museum, it features art inspired by science. A recent visit to the finalist's exhibition of the Waterhouse prize had the author thinking about the narrowing of…
Descriptors: Exhibits, Natural Sciences, Art, Foreign Countries
Klaver, Lida T.; Sins, Patrick H. M.; Walma van der Molen, Juliette H.; Guérin, Laurence J. F. – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023
In this position paper, we introduce the concept of socioscientific capital (SSC) to denote students' resources that unequivocally play a part when students learn about and make decisions regarding socioscientific issues (SSIs). Students use a variety of resources when they engage with SSI. Our conceptualization of SSC expands on current…
Descriptors: Science Education, Educational Improvement, Science and Society, Resources
Waight, Noemi; Kayumova, Shakhnoza; Tripp, Jennifer; Achilova, Feyza – Science & Education, 2022
In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, which has resulted in the rapid emergence of vaccines, the dual benefits of both science and technology have been lauded, while dominant, deficit-based narratives of vaccine hesitancy and mistrust in science and medicine by the general public, particularly minoritized populations, run rampant. In this paper,…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Social Justice, Science Education, Futures (of Society)
Allen, David; Sinclair, Alex; Haroon, Hamied – Primary Science, 2021
The book "Superhero Scientists" was published in March 2021. This non-fiction text allows children to read about people involved in the fascinating world of science. The 21 chapters are full of facts, life stories and scientific discoveries, from astrophysicists to pilots, epidemiologists to vets, marine biologists to scene-of-crime…
Descriptors: Scientists, Diversity, Ethnic Stereotypes, Childrens Literature
Rueter Veiga, Josefina – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2020
This article is a response to Annika Karlsson, Pia Nygård Larsson, and Anders Jakobsson's "The continuity of learning in a translanguaging science classroom". I consider the parallels between the practice of translanguaging and border crossing, and how the research related to border crossing might inform translanguaging. In conclusion, I…
Descriptors: Multilingualism, Science Education, Language of Instruction, Educational Research
Zhao, Steven; Chang, David; Miyakawa, Muga; Bai, Heesoon – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2020
In this response paper, we continue and further expand upon Elizabeth Watts' discussion on Buddhism and science, in the context of teachers' searching for the pedagogical "means to increasing student receptivity to science." While we share Watts' concern over the detrimental consequences of creationism in schools, we also offer an…
Descriptors: Buddhism, Science Education, Creationism, Religion
Earnest Watkins, Shari – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2022
In this paper, I discuss how Walls employs color-blind ideology, a critical race theory (CRT) tenet to analyze the role of race in the draw-a-scientist (DAST) literature. Walls' article, "A critical race theory analysis of the draw-a-scientist test: Are they really that white?" exposes how omitting race in DAST research leads to…
Descriptors: Critical Theory, Race, Science Education, Freehand Drawing
Gough, Annette – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
This essay responds to Jill Williams and Sara Tolbert (2021) and discusses the similarities and differences in curriculum, classroom, teaching and standards between Arizona, USA, and Victoria, Australia. Williams and Tolbert relate a good news story in a state of neoliberal educational despair. This essay argues that, from a relatively well…
Descriptors: Science Education, STEM Education, Foreign Countries, Comparative Education
Hecht, Marijke – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2021
This paper is a reflection on Bobby Habig, Preeti Gupta, and Jennifer Adams' article "Disrupting deficit narratives in informal science education: Applying community cultural wealth theory to youth learning and engagement" (EJ1307485). The article examines the significance of community cultural capital and the need for informal STEM…
Descriptors: Cultural Capital, STEM Education, Informal Education, Museums
Tan, Michael – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2020
This forum paper responds to the article summarising the similarities between science, technology, societies, and the environment; socio-scientific inquiry; and socially acute questions. Collectively called science in context (SinC), the authors propose that philosophers, borrowing Marx, should also change the world, and not merely interpret it.…
Descriptors: Science Education, Role of Education, Science and Society, Context Effect
Karasahinoglu Fackler, Ayça – Kappa Delta Pi Record, 2020
Teachers can learn a lot from John Dewey's approach to teaching science. The author contends that his thoughts are still relevant and applicable to today's classrooms.
Descriptors: Progressive Education, Science Instruction, Science Education, Experiential Learning
Morales-Doyle, Daniel – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2019
As a response to Fortney and Atwood's "Teaching with understanding while teaching for understanding" (this issue), this paper challenges definitions of equity that do not explicitly deal with oppression and injustice. I argue that in order to address the problem of inequity at its roots, we must re-center the historical, political, and…
Descriptors: Science Education, Social Justice, Definitions, Educational Objectives