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Joel Hooper; Marzieh Azarbadegan; Evie Cogley; Michelle Mackie; Nathan Bransden – UK Department for Education, 2024
In January 2024, building on the Genomics Beyond Health report, the Department for Education (DfE), with co-funding from the Government Office for Science (GO-Science), commissioned Ipsos UK through the Futures Procurement Framework to understand the potential future risks and opportunities of the use of genomics in education. The Government…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Genetics, Genetic Disorders, Congenital Impairments
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Gary N. Marks; Michael O'Connell – Review of Education, 2024
The first section of this paper sets the record straight regarding many of Debouwere's (2024, "Review of Education," 12, e3445) specific criticisms. The second section discusses the magnitude of the SES-achievement relationship, specifically Debouwere's (2024) contention that the correlation is strong around 0.5 or 0.6 compared to…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Cognitive Ability, Genetics, Socioeconomic Status
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Shotwell, Mark – American Biology Teacher, 2021
Pedigree analysis has long been an essential tool in human genetics as well as a staple of genetics education. Students of genetics might be surprised to learn that human pedigrees were first popularized in the United States by proponents of eugenics, the pseudoscientific social movement aimed at improving the genetic quality of the human race.…
Descriptors: Genetics, Genetic Disorders, Social Problems, Science Activities
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Marianna Y. Zhang; J. Nicky Sullivan; Ellen M. Markman; Steven O. Roberts – Child Development Perspectives, 2024
Across development, young children reason about why social inequities exist. However, when left to their own devices, young children might engage in "internal thinking," reasoning that the inequity is simply a justified disparity explained by features internal to social groups (e.g., genetics, intellect, abilities, values). Internal…
Descriptors: Childrens Attitudes, Abstract Reasoning, Social Differences, Young Children
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Jason McCartney – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2024
Science should provide students an accurate and contemporary education on genetic influence, particularly how it impacts trait variability and developmental norms. Stories involving familial, racial, and sexual differences routinely appear in the popular media and sales of over-the-counter genetic tests are mounting. Unfortunately, research…
Descriptors: Genetics, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, History
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Lee Kennedy-Shaffer – Journal of Statistics and Data Science Education, 2024
In recent years, the discipline of statistics has begun reckoning with its difficult history. Institutions are reconsidering names that have honored key historical figures in statistics who have deep ties to eugenics movements and racial and class prejudice. These names, however, continue to appear in our classrooms, where we teach the methods…
Descriptors: Statistics, Statistics Education, Mathematics Instruction, History
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Tiantian Cheng; Lingzhen Cao; Meng Zou – American Biology Teacher, 2024
The central dogma of molecular biology describes the transfer of genetic information from nucleic acids to proteins and stipulates that the system cannot work in the reverse direction. As a fundamental principle in biology, the dogma is as influential as it is controversial. Some commentators have debated the central dogma's empirical accuracy…
Descriptors: Biology, Genetics, Science Instruction, Physiology
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Tim T. Morris; Stephanie von Hinke; Lindsey Pike; Neil R. Ingram; George Davey Smith; Marcus R. Munafò; Neil M. Davies – British Educational Research Journal, 2024
Research at the intersection of social science and genomics, 'sociogenomics', is transforming our understanding of the interplay between genomics, individual outcomes and society. It has interesting and maybe unexpected implications for education research and policy. Here we review the growing sociogenomics literature and discuss its implications…
Descriptors: Social Sciences, Genetics, Outcomes of Education, Educational Policy
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G. S., Aiswarya; Ponniah, R. Joseph – Journal of Psycholinguistic Research, 2023
Research regarding dysgraphia, an impairment in writing, is attaining more attention in recent times. The existing studies on dysgraphia draw insights from cognitive, behavioural, neurological, and genetic fields of knowledge. However, these multiple studies on dysgraphia fail to illustrate how these cognitive, behavioural, neurological, and…
Descriptors: Learning Disabilities, Writing Difficulties, Cognitive Science, Cognitive Processes
Robert J. Sternberg – Gifted Child Quarterly, 2024
This article proposes a duplex model for understanding giftedness. The first part of the duplex is the set of gifted skills and attitudes that one possesses as a result of heredity, the environment, and their interaction. It is the input that one has acquired from one's life experiences. The second part of the duplex is the utilization or…
Descriptors: Gifted, Individual Characteristics, Ability, Models
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Yosef A. Gil Karo – Inquiry: The Journal of the Virginia Community Colleges, 2024
This Notes in Brief contribution explores the use of autosomal DNA to engage college faculty and staff in a different approach to diversity and inclusion discussions, including antisemitism, on campuses. The author provides results from DNA testing and how he has used his results to discuss his common ancestry with students to build bridges as a…
Descriptors: Inclusion, Genetics, College Faculty, Professional Personnel
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Singh, Anoushka; Miller, Ryan C.; Archuleta, Stephen R.; Kugel, Jennifer F. – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2023
Transcription is the critical first step in expressing a gene, during which an RNA polymerase (RNAP) synthesizes an RNA copy of one strand of the DNA that encodes a gene. Here we describe a laboratory experiment that uses a single assay to probe two important steps in transcription: (1) RNAP binding to DNA, and (2) the transcriptional activity of…
Descriptors: Molecular Biology, Science Instruction, Genetics, Teaching Methods
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Zevenhuizen, Erik – American Biology Teacher, 2022
In 1900, three botanists claimed they had found regularities in inheritance, which soon would be known as Mendel's Laws, without knowing the work of Gregor Mendel or of each other. Their claims of independent (re)discovery have been thoroughly studied during the past decades, with various outcomes. The case is still of interest today as it offers…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Science History, Heredity, Genetics
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Cardenas, Sofia I.; Morris, Alyssa R.; Marshall, Narcis; Aviv, Elizabeth C.; Martínez García, Magdalena; Sellery, Pia; Saxbe, Darby E. – Child Development Perspectives, 2022
Extensive research has established that fathers' engagement in parenting benefits children, but few studies have described how fathers contribute to child development even before birth. In this article, we consider both direct and indirect pathways through which expectant fathers shape child development during the prenatal period. Regarding direct…
Descriptors: Fathers, Parent Role, Child Rearing, Child Development
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Sara A. Hart; Callie Little; Elsje van Bergen – npj Science of Learning, 2021
Across a wide range of studies, researchers often conclude that the home environment and children's outcomes are causally linked. In contrast, behavioral genetic studies show that parents influence their children by providing them with both environment and genes, meaning the environment that parents provide should not be considered in the absence…
Descriptors: Family Environment, Genetics, Methods, Parent Child Relationship
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