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Garrison, Jim – Science Education, 2003
Endorses John L. Rudolph's argument that the time spent on "the nature of science as a thing-in-itself" is less than the time spent "seeking greater consensus about what social function we wish our image of science to serve". Focuses on Dewey's and Schwab's ideas to discuss the function and practice of science education. (Contains 14 references.)…
Descriptors: Culture, Educational Philosophy, Science Curriculum, Science Education
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Berland, Leema Kuhn; Reiser, Brian J. – Science Education, 2009
Constructing scientific explanations and participating in argumentative discourse are seen as essential practices of scientific inquiry (e.g., R. Driver, P. Newton, & J. Osborne, 2000). In this paper, we identify three goals of engaging in these related scientific practices: (1) sensemaking, (2) articulating, and (3) persuading. We propose using…
Descriptors: Persuasive Discourse, Scientific Principles, Inquiry, Student Participation
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Rudolph, John L. – Science Education, 2003
Describes current debates over the nature of science in the science curriculum. Illustrates the subtle ways in which epistemological portrayals have been influenced with regard to the public's relationship with institutional science in the United States by using the curricular ideas of John Dewey and Joseph Schwab as an historical perspective.…
Descriptors: Epistemology, Inquiry, Science Curriculum, Science Education
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Sandoval, William A.; Reiser, Brian J. – Science Education, 2004
Science education reforms consistently maintain the goal that students develop an understanding of the nature of science, including both the nature of scientific knowledge and methods for making it. This paper articulates a framework for scaffolding epistemic aspects of inquiry that can help students understand inquiry processes in relation to the…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Scientific Principles, Science Education, Science Instruction
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Helms, Jenifer V.; Carlone, Heidi B. – Science Education, 1999
Proposes four formulations of the commonplaces of science based on distinct views of the nature of science, and explores the consequences of each. Argues that although each formulation has strengths, some commonplaces prove more comprehensive than others in capturing the essence of science for the purposes of developing curriculum, educating…
Descriptors: Educational Research, Elementary Secondary Education, Higher Education, Models
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Glasson, George E.; Bentley, Michael L. – Science Education, 2000
Investigates how scientists, from both a practical and epistemological perspective, communicated the nature and relevance of their research to classroom teachers. Determines the congruence and/or dissimilarity in how scientists described their research to teachers and how they viewed their research epistemologically. Concludes that scientists from…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, Engineers, Epistemology, Knowledge Base for Teaching
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Friedrichsen, Patricia Meis; Munford, Danusa; Orgill, MaryKay – Science Education, 2006
Using a theoretical perspective of communities of practice, this case study examines a prospective chemistry teacher's inquiry-based teaching during his practicum. Conrad was a former student of an inquiry-oriented science course, "Inquiry Empowering Technologies" (IET). The research questions were (a) How did Conrad translate the IET inquiry…
Descriptors: Science Curriculum, Science Teachers, Practicums, Mentors