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Dolbear, Sam; Proctor, Hannah – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2016
The French utopian socialist Charles Fourier is a key figure in Walter Benjamin's "Arcades Project". For Benjamin, one of the most significant aspects of Fourier's utopian vision was its conceptualisation of work as a form of play. According to Fourier it would be possible to build a world around people's inherent desires. In such a…
Descriptors: Children, Scientific Principles, Science Instruction, Astronomy
Cunha, Ricardo F. F.; Tort, A. C. – Physics Education, 2017
Newton's law of universal gravitation underpins our understanding of the dynamics of the Solar System and of a good portion of the observable universe. Generally, in the classroom or in textbooks, the law is presented initially in a qualitative way and at some point during the exposition its mathematical formulation is written on the blackboard…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Astronomy
Toscano, Maurizio – Australian Association for Research in Education, 2015
How can we begin to imagine a post-modern rendering of science education when the disciples of science continue to cling so firmly to a creation myth in which Science, like Botticelli's Venus stepping forth from a clam shell, breaks away from the pre-modern metaphysical commitments of religion, magic and the superstition in a singular event called…
Descriptors: Science Education, Scientific Concepts, Science History, Astronomy
Galili, Igal – Science & Education, 2016
Physics textbooks often present items of disciplinary knowledge in a sequential order of topics of the theory under instruction. Such presentation is usually univocal, that is, isolated from alternative claims and contributions regarding the subject matter in the pertinent scientific discourse. We argue that comparing and contrasting the…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Introductory Courses
Decamp, Nicolas; de Hosson, Cecile – Science & Education, 2012
This paper presents a critical analysis of the accepted educational use of the method performed by Eratosthenes to measure the circumference of Earth which is often considered as a relevant means of dealing with issues related to the nature of science and its history. This method relies on a number of assumptions among which the parallelism of sun…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Methodology, Measurement, Astronomy
de Hosson, Cécile; Décamp, Nicolas – Science & Education, 2014
A great amount of research has been carried out world-wide to promote history of science as a powerful science teaching tool. Because the ways of choosing and using historical elements depend on teachers' or researchers' educational purpose, any attempt to support a single model-to-use seems difficult and probably irrelevant. However,…
Descriptors: Astronomy, Science History, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods
Yu, Ka Chun; Sahami, Kamran; Denn, Grant – Astronomy Education Review, 2010
We present the analysis of oral interviews with 112 undergraduate nonmajor students during the first week of a General Education Introduction to Astronomy class before they had received any instruction. The students were asked questions relating to Kepler's three Laws of Motion, as well as their understanding of what keeps planets in orbit around…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Motion, Undergraduate Students, Nonmajors
Harvey, Alex – European Journal of Physics, 2009
The recently observed acceleration of the expansion of the universe is a topic of intense interest. The favoured causes are the "cosmological constant" or "dark energy". The former, which appears in the Einstein equations as the term [lambda]g[subscript [mu]v], provides an extremely simple, well-defined mechanism for the acceleration. However,…
Descriptors: Energy, Science Instruction, Physics, Equations (Mathematics)
Plotnick, Roy E.; Varelas, Maria; Fan, Qian – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2009
Physical World is a one-semester course designed for elementary education majors, that integrates earth science, astronomy, and physics. The course is part of a four-course set that explores science concepts, processes, and skills, along with the nature of scientific practice, that are included in state and national standards for elementary school…
Descriptors: Elementary Education, Majors (Students), Earth Science, Astronomy
Reed, B. Cameron – Physics Teacher, 2006
In his "The Making of the Atomic Bomb," Richard Rhodes remarks of the July 16, 1945, Trinity atomic bomb test in New Mexico that "had astronomers been watching they could have seen it reflected from the moon, literal moonshine," an allusion to Ernest Rutherford's famous dismissal of the prospect of atomic energy. Investigating…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Weapons, Nuclear Physics, Astronomy
Charney, Davida – Written Communication, 2003
Popular accounts of scientific discoveries diverge from scholarly accounts, stripping off hedges and promoting short-term social consequences. This case study illustrates how the "horse-race" framing of popular accounts devalues the collective sharing, challenging, and extending of scientific work. In her best-selling "Longitude," Dava Sobel…
Descriptors: Science Equipment, Measurement Equipment, Case Studies, Oceanography