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Showing 1 to 15 of 102 results Save | Export
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Ruth Wareham – Educational Theory, 2025
The COVID-19 pandemic brought the importance of vaccination and public attitudes toward it firmly to the fore. However, vaccine hesitancy and refusal remain significant barriers to global uptake, with post-pandemic declines in routine immunization contributing to disease outbreaks worldwide. Research shows that education plays a vital role in…
Descriptors: Teacher Role, Advocacy, Immunization Programs, COVID-19
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Sinatra, Gale M. – Educational Psychologist, 2022
The psychology of science resistance, doubt, and denial has never had clearer consequences than during the COVID-19 pandemic. This manuscript explores how misconceptions about climate change, vaccines, and COVID-19 cannot be understood apart from the conscious and unconscious motivations and emotions which contribute to public (mis)understanding…
Descriptors: Motivation, Emotional Response, Public Opinion, Misconceptions
Goldstein, Michael; Paulle, Bowen – Thomas B. Fordham Institute, 2021
High-dosage tutoring is receiving a lot of buzz as a promising tool to address learning loss in the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic. But unlike vaccines, successful tutoring programs are challenging to scale with fidelity. In this paper, long-time educators Michael Goldstein and Bowen Paulle recommend: (1) Evaluating tutoring programs and measuring…
Descriptors: Tutoring, Instructional Effectiveness, Leadership, Educational Research
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Cassam, Quassim – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
This paper argues that vice-charging, the practice of charging other persons with epistemic vice, can itself be epistemically vicious. It identifies some potential vices of vice-charging and identifies knowledge of other people as a type of knowledge that is obstructed by epistemically vicious attributions of epistemic vice. The hazards of…
Descriptors: Parents, Children, Immunization Programs, Parent Responsibility
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Roth, Wolff-Michael – Canadian Journal of Science, Mathematics and Technology Education, 2022
During the COVID-19 crisis, we have been able to witness, in many countries, a substantive resistance to the science-based arguments of politicians and to the calls from the medical field to implement safety measures (masks, distancing) and to get vaccinated. In this text, some reflections are provided on what this resistance might tell the…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Science Education, Persuasive Discourse
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Bazzul, Jesse – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
This paper employs Michel Foucault's "History of Sexuaity: Confessions of the Flesh" to shed light on the perplexing phenomenon of vaccine (mandate) resistance. It argues that vaccine (mandate) resistance, while seemingly irresponsible and selfish, is entangled with the same modes of 'truth-telling' that have been part of the basic…
Descriptors: Immunization Programs, Responsibility, Scientific Attitudes, Scientific Literacy
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Dawson, Angus – Research Ethics, 2020
It has been proposed that the urgency of having a vaccine as a response to SARS-CoV-2 is so great, given the potential health, economic and social benefits that we should override the established steps in the research development process. In this article I argue that whilst there are some opportunities to expedite the production of a vaccine, it…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Immunization Programs, Research Methodology
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Gottschling, Juliana; Krieger, Florian; Greiff, Samuel – Journal of Intelligence, 2022
The development of a vaccine marks a breakthrough in the fight against infectious diseases. However, to eradicate highly infectious diseases globally, the immunization of large parts of the population is needed. Otherwise, diseases, such as polio, measles, or more recently COVID-19, will repeatedly flare-up, with devastating effects on individuals…
Descriptors: Communicable Diseases, COVID-19, Pandemics, Immunization Programs
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Ganz, Jennifer B.; Katsiyannis, Antonis; Morin, Kristi L. – Intervention in School and Clinic, 2018
Purveyors of false treatments frequently claim their treatments are effective, despite a lack of evidence. In some cases, these treatments can lead to dire results. This column examines the use of one such false treatment, facilitated communication, that has reemerged despite a substantial body of evidence discrediting it. A description of the…
Descriptors: Autism, Intervention, Disabilities, Immunization Programs
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Gosztonyi, Katalin – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2021
In this article, I present the eighteenth century's polemic of Bernoulli and d'Alembert concerning the smallpox epidemic and a prevention method called inoculation. Through an analysis of the polemic and the related resources, I show that this historical debate has various interests for mathematics education; and more specifically it can help…
Descriptors: Educational History, Pandemics, Communicable Diseases, Mathematics Education
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Mark Wolfmeyer; John Lupinacci – Critical Education, 2022
Although many other factors come to bear on present issues in the contemporary world, vaccine hesitancy and refusal are also the direct result of poor STEM education. In this article we employ a sociological thought experiment methodology to articulate the shortcomings of STEM education and suggest pathways for much needed changes in solving…
Descriptors: Immunization Programs, Health Behavior, STEM Education, Barriers
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Chappell, Richard Yetter; Singer, Peter – Research Ethics, 2020
There is too much that we do not know about COVID-19. The longer we take to find it out, the more lives will be lost. In this paper, we will defend a principle of "risk parity": if it is permissible to expose some members of society (e.g. health workers or the economically vulnerable) to a certain level of "ex ante" risk in…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Medical Research, Risk
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Dayal, Vikram – International Journal of Mathematical Education in Science and Technology, 2023
Epidemiological models have enhanced relevance because of the COVID-19 pandemic. In this note, we emphasize visual tools that can be part of a learning module geared to teaching the SIR epidemiological model, suitable for advanced undergraduates or beginning graduate students in disciplines where the level of prior mathematical knowledge of…
Descriptors: Biology, Visual Aids, Epidemiology, Science Instruction
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Witman, Paul D. – Information Systems Education Journal, 2021
The rapid emergence of the novel coronavirus and its impact on human behavior provoked dramatic increases in human usage of a variety of systems. These increases had the potential to stress the scalability of the systems, testing whether the system owners had designed and built those systems to cope with sudden changes in demand. This case invites…
Descriptors: Information Systems, COVID-19, Pandemics, Internet
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Reiss, Michael J. – Science & Education, 2022
The issue of trust in science has come to the fore in recent years. I focus on vaccines, first looking at what is known about trust in vaccines and then concentrating on whether what science education teaches about vaccines can be trusted. I present an argument to connect the phenomenon of vaccine hesitancy to the issue of trust and then argue for…
Descriptors: Immunization Programs, Trust (Psychology), Information Sources, Science Education
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