Archive for the 'Feature Focus Posts' Category
Feature Focus Article, Volume 3 Issue 1
In this Article,
practices in schools, the role of identities-in-practice in relation to participation in communities of practice such as classrooms are explored. Recommendations for key design features in effective science educational spaces, based upon the findings presented in the collection of four studies, are offered. School, it is suggested here, functions best as a clearing house for the myriad science-related stories student participants generate in their various communities of practice (e.g., within popular culture, family, community, informal educational sites). In this way, Dhingra aruges, school has the potential to construct bridges between multiple student experiences and identities-in-practice..
You can download this review essay as a PDF document by clicking on the title above.
No commentsSpecial Feature Focus Article – NARST: A lived history
In this Forum, NARST_A lived history.pdf nineteen different authors construct a history of the National Association for Research in Science Education (NARST) through the analysis of documents and through the personal perspectives of individuals. The history of NARST is inseparable from the biography of the individuals through whose lives it was produced and reproduced. The history of NARST is a living history that both shapes and was shaped by the biographies of its members.
You can download this multi-authored, multiple perspective Forum as a PDF document by clicking on the title above.
No commentsFeature Focus Forum, Volume 2 Issue 3
The Feature Focus Forum to be selected from Volume 2 Issue 3 is Learning without belief-change?
In this Forum, Michael H.G. Hoffman raises some questions in relation to El-Hani and Mortimer’s central thesis that science education should “avoid” the idea of changing students’ beliefs and explores the necessity of enabling students to be able to participate in discourse that both challenges their beliefs as well as their teachers’ beliefs. In response, El-Hani and Mortimer engage in a refocused discussion of some of Hoffman’s key arguments.
*Note For ease of access, the feature focus article and forum are available in the same PDF download. Hoffman’s contribution to the Forum begins on page 32 of the document and the response by El-Hani and Mortimer begins on page 39 of the document. Click on title of Forum to access PDF.
Michael H.G. Hoffman Michael H. G. Hoffmann is Associate Professor in the School of Public Policy at the Georgia Institute of Technology (e-mail: m.hoffmann@gatech.edu). His research interests include semiotic and epistemological foundations of learning theories and of conflict research theories. His recent publications include ‘Signs as means for discoveries. Peirce and his concepts of ‘‘Diagrammatic Reasoning,’’ ‘‘Theorematic Deduction,’’
‘‘Hypostatic Abstraction,’’ and ‘‘Theoric Transformation’’’ (2005); ‘How to Get It. Diagrammatic Reasoning as a Tool of Knowledge Development and its Pragmatic Dimension’ (2004); and ‘Learning from people, things, and signs’ (2007).
Feature Focus Article, Volume 2, Issue 3
The Feature Focus article to be selected from Volume 2 Issue 2 is Multicultural education, pragmatism, and the goals of science teaching.
*Note For ease of access, the feature focus article and forum are available in the same PDF download. Click on title of article to access PDF.
ABSTRACT In this paper, we offer an intermediate position in the multiculturalism/universalism debate, drawing upon Cobern and Loving’s epistemological pluralism, pragmatist philosophies, Southerland’s defense of instructional multicultural science education, and the conceptual profile model. An important element in this position is the proposal that understanding is the proper goal of science education. Our commitment to this proposal is explained in terms of a defense of an ethics of coexistence for dealing with cultural differences, according to which social argumentative processes—including those in science education—should be marked by dialogue and confrontation of arguments in the search of possible solutions, and an effort to (co-)live with differences if a negotiated solution is not reached. To understand the discourses at stake is, in our view, a key requirement for the coexistence of arguments and discourses, and the science classroom is the privileged space for promoting an understanding of the scientific discourse in particular. We argue for “inclusion” of students’ culturally grounded ideas in science education, but in a sense that avoids curricular multicultural science education, and, thus, any attempt to broaden the definition of “science” so that ideas from other ways of knowing might be simply treated as science contents. We expect this paper can contribute to the elaboration of an instructional multicultural science education approach that eliminates the forced choice between the goals of promoting students’ understanding of scientific ideas and of empowering students through education.
Charbel Nin˜o El-Hani is Professor of History, Philosophy, and Biology Teaching at the Institute of Biology, Universidade Federal da Bahia, Brazil, and Researcher of the CNPq (National Council for Scientific and Technological Development). He is affiliated with the Graduate Studies Programs in History, Philosophy, and Science Teaching (Universidade Federal da Bahia and Universidade Estadual de Feira de Santana) and in Ecology and Biomonitoring (Universidade Federal da Bahia). His research interests are in science education research, philosophy of biology, biosemiotics, and animal behavior.
Eduardo F. Mortimer is Professor of Education at the Universidade Federal de Minas Gerais, Belo Horizonte, Brazil and Researcher of the CNPq (National Council for Scientific and Technological Development). He is a former high school chemistry teacher. His research interests focus on science learning, classroom discourse and professional development of science teachers. He is President of the Brazilian Science Education Research Association (2005–2009), editor of ‘‘Educac¸a˜o em Revista’’, a Brazilian journal of educational research, and member of editorial boards of Brazilian and international journals in education and science education.
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