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Mak, Se-Yuen – Chinese University Education Journal, 1988
Reports the development of an instrument for gathering information about the attitudes of Hong Kong secondary school teachers towards evolution. Describes the establishment, through criteria found in the literature, of a logical and systematic procedure for the validation of this Likert-type instrument. Tentatively found that the 15-item scale was…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Evolution, Foreign Countries, Measurement Techniques
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
McGeorge, Colin – History of Education, 1992
Discusses the teaching of evolution in New Zealand during the first half of the twentieth century. Reports that evolution instruction began formally in the 1920s but was withdrawn 30 years later amid protests. Observes that the teaching of evolution predated the 1920s in muted form. Describes the roles of broadcasting and religion in the dispute.…
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Curriculum Development, Educational History, Elementary Education
Zeitoun, Hassan Hussein; Hassan, Abdel moneim Ahamed – 1985
This study determined the effect of written persuasive communication on changing the attitudes of Egyptian preservice biology teachers toward teaching the topic of organic evolution. Attitude change was measured by administering an instrument (the Attitude Toward Teaching Evolution Scale) developed for the study. This 22-item, Likert-type scale…
Descriptors: Attitude Change, Biology, Evolution, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Clough, Elizabeth Engel; And Others – School Science Review, 1987
Reports on a study designed to examine students' understanding of certain aspects of heat, pressure, and evolution. Results indicated that little change was apparent over the two-year period of the study, with most of the students in the 12 to 14 age range at the same conceptual level as the 14 to 16 year olds. (TW)
Descriptors: Cognitive Structures, Concept Formation, Evolution, Foreign Countries
Peer reviewed Peer reviewed
Holden, Constance – Science, 1988
Discusses some of the similarities and differences between the attitudes of Japanese and American citizens toward science. Reports on major discrepancies between the two populations' views about such things as evolution, the development of new plants and animals, and the effect of rocket launchings on the weather. (TW)
Descriptors: Controversial Issues (Course Content), Environmental Education, Evolution, Foreign Countries