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Nadine M. Kalin – International Journal of Art & Design Education, 2024
The loss of relational networks and life-sustaining capacities of the Earth resulting from the Anthropocene/Capitalocene provoke ambiguous pedagogical experimenting with the limits of the known. The Akokisa River of Texas is more than its extractive use-value based on humanist rationality. Water connector Ángel Faz approaches the River as more…
Descriptors: Experimental Teaching, Earth Science, Ecology, Holistic Approach
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Alf Coles; Armando Solares-Rojas; Kate le Roux – Educational Studies in Mathematics, 2024
In this theoretical article, we argue that the imminent collapse of earth systems that sustain life forms calls for mathematics education as a field to reflect on and re-evaluate its priorities and thus practices. We consider both what ecological collapse means for mathematics education and whether mathematics education might offer meaningful…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Ecological Factors, Social Influences, Sustainability
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Neil Houser – Journal of International Social Studies, 2024
The primary purpose of education is preparation for life. But what kind of life, and life for whom? Within the social studies, emphasis has long been placed on preparation for civic life in diverse and democratic societies within an interconnected world. This remains essential. There is an ongoing need for people who are willing and able to…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Citizenship Education, Ecological Factors, Quality of Life
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Enya G. Chitty; Patrick A. Hesp – Natural Sciences Education, 2024
Field studies are defined here as any study of the natural world that occurs beyond classrooms. There is rising concern for the future of field studies in Earth and Environmental Sciences in Higher Education, despite being core to environmental inquiry, as cost-cutting across the sector was intensified by the COVID-19 pandemic. This paper reviews…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Environmental Education, Field Studies, College Science
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Ranniery, Thiago – Prospects, 2021
This text is a simultaneously personal and political commentary on those who inhabit the border between worlds, such as those now at war in a viral assemblage. Starting from a general intention of shifting curricular responses away from instrumental and technical solutions toward cultivating the ability to act and think in times of uncertainty,…
Descriptors: Caring, Earth Science, Responsibility, COVID-19
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Lixin Wang; Samuel Cornelius Nyarko; Matthew Lanning – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2024
The COVID-19 pandemic has created numerous disruptions for educators and researchers, especially in 2020 and 2021. Critical in-person activities, including research, have been postponed or canceled throughout the academic and professional communities of the world. The Project SEED (Summer Experiences for the Economically Disadvantaged) program for…
Descriptors: High School Students, Student Motivation, COVID-19, Pandemics
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Johnson, Philip – School Science Review, 2020
Earthbound manifestations of gravity in falling objects are distorted by the large mass and size of the Earth. Movement is also affected by air resistance. This article questions whether an approach based on everyday observations is necessarily the best starting point for introducing the idea of Newtonian gravity. Instead, a theoretical approach…
Descriptors: Science Education, Earth Science, Misconceptions, Scientific Concepts
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Foley, William J., Jr. – Prospects, 2021
This article seeks to use Dewey's interpretation of pragmatism and education as a model for how dominant notions of school exemplify a e. The article argues that Dewey sought to commodify nature as a tool for human progress. This aspect of Dewey's beliefs is further demonstrated in the kind of schooling that is being implemented through…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Educational Philosophy, Educational Theories
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Mattos, Cristiano; Lopez, Felipe Sanches; Ortega, José Luis; Rodrigues, André – Science & Education, 2022
The paper reflects on public discourses about science and pseudoscience, proposing the same discursive structure for both--the Esperantist-Epideictic genre. This genre of discourse might bring together characteristics that we understand as constituents of the public discourse on science. It also enables us to depict the process by which to…
Descriptors: Public Opinion, Discourse Analysis, Earth Science, Misconceptions
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Perera, Viranga; Mead, Chris; van der Hoeven Kraft, Katrien J.; Stanley, Sabine; Angappan, Regupathi; MacKenzie, Shannon; Barik, Ankit; Buxner, Sanlyn – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2021
The future viability of the geosciences is challenged, since as a community we continue to lack demographic diversity representative of the wider population. Fundamentally, dominant cultural, historical, and socioeconomic factors contribute to the lack of diversity and those factors typically change slowly over generations. Proposals for more…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Science Instruction, Emotional Response, Student Diversity
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Goldin, Jaqui; Mokomela, Resego; Kanyerere, Thokozani; Villholth, Karen G. – Journal of Education for Sustainable Development, 2021
With the impulse to control and order the disorderly, the threads or tributaries of affect and emotion, which mimic the meanderings of the aquifer itself, are often oversimplified or ignored. These are not anomalies of citizen science (CS) but 'normal' and expected 'disconnects' that surface when working within a multidisciplinary environment. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Citizen Participation, Scientific Research, Feminism
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McNeal, Peggy M.; Petcovic, Heather L. – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2020
The geosciences consist of multiple disciplines including geology, oceanography, and atmospheric science. Significant work expended to understand spatial thinking skills important to teaching and learning geology has advanced our ability to support students in geology courses and to achieve increased student success, retention, and diversity in…
Descriptors: Earth Science, Science Education, Educational Research, Spatial Ability
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Posselt, Julie R.; Nuñez, Anne-Marie – Journal of Higher Education, 2022
This paper examines the creation and negotiation of disciplinary culture, through ethnographic fieldwork about socialization in a critical learning environment: scientific fieldwork. Field-based science has received scant research attention relative to its importance as a degree requirement, a professional rite of passage, and a site where sexual…
Descriptors: Intellectual Disciplines, Sexual Harassment, Sexual Abuse, Earth Science
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Berry, Alex; Delgado Vintimilla, Cristina; Pacini-Ketchabaw, Veronica – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2020
In an inquiry with young children at a small river beside a school in Cuenca, Ecuador, romanticizations of harmonious childhoods and pristine, even magical, river natures are in abundance. Using common worlds framings, this article interrupts purity in child-nature pedagogies. We argue that encountering the river as a site of contradiction, and as…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Teaching Methods, Outdoor Education, Physical Activities
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Chaudhuri, S. – Physics Education, 2019
In this paper, we derive an equation for the distance covered by a free-falling body as a function of time valid for any arbitrary distance. The equation, interestingly, yields exactly the time according to the Kepler's third law in the limiting case of very large distance compared to the radius of the Earth. The equation, of course, reduces to…
Descriptors: Physics, Science Instruction, Earth Science, Scientific Principles
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