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Showing 16 to 30 of 3,304 results Save | Export
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Kathryn L. Kirchgasler; Diego Román – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2025
Our study explores how US science education has evaluated multilingual students' languages as deficits and/or assets by comparing them against normative ideals. As a raciolinguistic genealogy, the study situates current premises of language in science education (e.g., as problem versus resource) within epistemological practices shaping the field's…
Descriptors: Science Education, Race, Linguistics, Epistemology
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Berntsen, Madelene Losvik; Vik, Camilla Berge; Lykknes, Annette – Science & Education, 2023
The French natural philosopher Henri Victor Regnault (1810-1878) was one of many researchers who contributed to the development of the thermometer in the 19th century. In this paper, we use an example from Regnault's work to explore how the history of thermometry can provide a context for teaching upper-secondary chemistry students about the…
Descriptors: Secondary School Science, Science Instruction, Teaching Methods, Science History
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Raina, Dhruv – Higher Education for the Future, 2023
This article takes up the argument from an earlier article and seeks to detail the importance and role of the history and philosophy of science (HPS), conceived as a unitary interdisciplinary field, in science education. However, on this count, it not only seeks to ground the salience for science education at the school level but also its role in…
Descriptors: Science History, Philosophy, Interdisciplinary Approach, Science Education
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Begoña Torres; Raúl Velasco Morgado – History of Education, 2023
In the nineteenth century, a new method for teaching anatomy shifted the professor's position from the middle of the lecture amphitheatre to one side of the room. In this spot, the wall was used to display a variety of visual "flat technologies" such as blackboards, oil paintings, wallcharts and light projections, among other visual…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science History, Anatomy, Science Education
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Pieter T. L. Beck; Ruby Cornand; Wannes De Turck; Mieke Adriaens – Science & Education, 2025
In this article, we discuss the replication of a forgotten chemical instrument in the context of undergraduate chemistry education. Together with students, we have attempted to replicate an eighteenth century "eudiometrical" procedure. Eudiometry was the practice of measuring the "goodness" of the air by looking at the volume…
Descriptors: Undergraduate Students, College Science, Science Education, Chemistry
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Quenton Wessels; Adam M. Taylor – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2025
The public's fascination with anatomy has evolved over time and progressed from avoidance of the tainted yet saintly corpse, to their fascination with cabinets of curiosities. The current narrative review explores public engagement (PE), from its potential origins as cave paintings, to the rise of the disciplinarity of anatomy. Historical insights…
Descriptors: Anatomy, Science Education, Scientific Attitudes, Public Opinion
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Evans, James P. – American Biology Teacher, 2022
Although unrecognized for his scientific achievements during his life, Gregor Mendel pioneered our modern understanding of the gene, work that shaped the field of genetics and advances in biology and medicine. The field that he set in motion 200 years ago lies at the center of current ethical debates about the future of humanity, the limits of…
Descriptors: Science History, Scientists, Heredity, Genetics
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Noguera-Solano, Ricardo; Rodríguez-Caso, Juan Manuel; Ruiz-Gutiérrez, Rosaura – Science & Education, 2021
The name Lamarck is very well known in the teaching of biology, being associated with an early effort to explain evolution. Nevertheless, when evolution is taught in the classroom, the only Lamarckian ideas that stand out are related to the 'inheritance of acquired characters', invariably illustrated by the example of the lengthening of giraffes'…
Descriptors: Biology, Evolution, Scientific Concepts, Science Instruction
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Anna Koumara – Science & Education, 2024
Researchers of science education, historians, and philosophers of science agree that the teaching of nature of science (NOS) is important to be integrated into K-12 classes. Our previous research showed that NOS is not embedded into science teaching in Greece. To study the possibility of its integration, a PD-program for in-service science…
Descriptors: Scientific Principles, Faculty Development, Science Teachers, Teaching Methods
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Bruna Navarone Santos; Lucia de La Rocque; Isabela Cabral Félix de Sousa; Tokie Anme – Journal of International Students, 2025
In this paper, we investigate how cultural, historical, and emotional factors influence scientific concepts in Brazil's Scientific Vocation Program (Provoc) and Japan's Sakura Science Program. It analyzes how Western and Eastern views of science might shape program goals through high school students' reports. Science education, history and…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Secondary School Science, High School Students, Foreign Countries
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Daniel G. Krutka – Social Studies and the Young Learner, 2025
In a highly technological society, teachers need to help students grow as technoskeptical citizens who can think deeply about technologies to consider their collateral, unintended, and disproportionate effects on society. This article presents a technoskeptical Inquiry Design Model (IDM) lesson where upper elementary students critically inquire…
Descriptors: Social Studies, Elementary School Students, Energy, Science History
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Juliana Mesquita Contarini; Amanda de Sousa Martinez de Freitas; Thiago Aguiar Cacuro; Lai´s Jubini Callegario; Fernando Jose´ Luna Oliveira; Walter Ruggeri Waldman – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Potash, an essential raw material of the 18th century, used to be produced from the ashes of plants. Known since antiquity, it was in 1807 that Humphry Davy put an end to the decades-long controversy about its nature as a compound. The technology behind potash production was implemented in Brazil by the Portuguese naturalist Frei Velloso. The…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science Instruction, Chemistry, Science History
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Park, Wonyong; Song, Jinwoong – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2022
Despite the long-standing interest among science educators in using history of science in science teaching, little has been discussed around whether and how non-Western histories of science could be incorporated into science education. This study considers some opportunities and challenges of addressing East Asian history of science (EAHOS) in the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preservice Teachers, Science Teachers, Science History
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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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Frederick-Frost, Kristen – Journal of Chemical Education, 2021
As a member of the team that created elements 104 and 105 at Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, James Andrew Harris [1932-2000] was the first African American credited in the discovery of an element. This factoid has been posted on social media, used in a quiz game, and repeated on numerous Web sites. The story (if any context is offered at all) is…
Descriptors: Scientists, Chemistry, Discovery Processes, African Americans
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