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Showing 1 to 15 of 19 results Save | Export
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Idowu Biao – Journal of Adult and Continuing Education, 2024
This article discusses the place of the concept of global citizenship within the context of African values. It holds that if the modern concept of global citizenship education as espoused by UNESCO and other global organisations is relatively recent, the same concept is ancient within the context of sub-Saharan Africa and it is subsumed within…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Values, African Culture, Global Approach
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Franklin U. Onowugbeda; Peter A. Okebukola; Deborah O. Agbanimu; Oluseyi A. Ajayi; Adekunle I. Oladejo; Fred Awaah; Ibukunolu A. Ademola; Olasunkanmi A. Gbeleyi; Esther O. Peter; Adeleke M. Ige – Research in Science & Technological Education, 2024
Background: Studies in biology have shown that students perceive variation and evolution to be difficult areas to learn. This has sparked rote learning of variation and evolution concepts and is evidenced in poor performance in tests involving these concepts. Purpose: In light of the significant role of variation and evolution in a human's…
Descriptors: Biology, Science Instruction, Scientific Concepts, Evolution
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Sternberg, Robert J. – Journal of Intelligence, 2019
Intelligence typically is defined as consisting of "adaptation to the environment" or in related terms. Yet, it is not clear that "general intelligence" or g, traditionally conceptualized in terms of a general factor in a psychometrically-based hierarchical model of intelligence, provides an optimal way of defining intelligence…
Descriptors: Intelligence Tests, Psychometrics, Adjustment (to Environment), Definitions
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Taber, Keith S. – Cultural Studies of Science Education, 2017
Lisa Borgerding's work highlights how students can understand evolution without necessarily committing to it, and how learners may come to see it as one available way of thinking amongst others. This is presented as something that should be considered a successful outcome when teaching about material that many students may find incompatible with…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Teaching Methods, Science Education, Evolution
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Gauvain, Mary – Developmental Science, 2013
For over 50 years, developmental psychologists have conducted research around the world to understand the relation between culture and cognition. In fact, psychologists have been interested in this topic for over a century. In the late 1800s, Wundt introduced "Elements of Folk Psychology," the study of how culture becomes part of higher…
Descriptors: Developmental Psychology, Inquiry, Cultural Context, Intellectual History
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Legare, Cristine H.; Evans, E. Margaret; Rosengren, Karl S.; Harris, Paul L. – Child Development, 2012
Although often conceptualized in contradictory terms, the common assumption that natural and supernatural explanations are incompatible is psychologically inaccurate. Instead, there is considerable evidence that the same individuals use both natural and supernatural explanations to interpret the very same events and that there are multiple ways in…
Descriptors: Evidence, Evolution, Cognitive Development, Cultural Context
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BouJaoude, Saouma; Wiles, Jason R.; Asghar, Anila; Alters, Brian – Science & Education, 2011
In this study, we investigated distinctions among the diversity of religious traditions represented by Lebanese and Egyptian Muslim high school students regarding their understanding and acceptance of biological evolution and how they relate the science to their religious beliefs. We explored secondary students' conceptions of evolution among…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Evolution, Muslims, High School Students
Pellegrini, Anthony D., Ed. – Oxford University Press, 2010
The role of play in human development has long been the subject of controversy. Despite being championed by many of the foremost scholars of the twentieth century, play has been dogged by underrepresentation and marginalization in literature across the scientific disciplines. "The Oxford Handbook of the Development of Play" marks the first attempt…
Descriptors: Play, Child Development, Cultural Differences, Theories
Eddy, Lyle K. – Educ Theor, 1969
Descriptors: Cultural Context, Educational Theories, Educational Trends, Evolution
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Kampourakis, Kostas; Zogza, Vasso – Science & Education, 2007
In this paper, the main points of Lamarck's and Darwin's theoretical conceptual schemes about evolution are compared to those derived from 15 years old students' explanations of evolutionary episodes. We suggest that secondary students' preconceptions should not be characterized as "Lamarckian", because they are essentially different from the…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Misconceptions, Evolution, Science Education
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Montagu, Ashley – National Elementary Principal, 1971
An anthropologist states that man is a product of a unique evolutionary history. (Author)
Descriptors: Aggression, Anthropology, Child Development, Cultural Context
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Swimme, Brian – NAMTA Journal, 1999
Explores effect of the cultural story of the creation of the universe and development of civilization on the course of human history. Notes that our current story leaves us at a crossroads between progressive disconnection from the natural world and reestablishing a connection. Advocates reconstructing all human systems to develop an intellectual…
Descriptors: Cultural Awareness, Cultural Context, Elementary Education, Ethical Instruction
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Meyer, John K. – Education, 2004
We present the purpose of study of the origins and development of affect-relevant and religion-relevant hypotheses, and conjectured prediction of proto-religious sequences in pre-human anthropoids and primitive human cultures. We anticipate more comprehensive study of modern cultural outcomes of these origins and developments.
Descriptors: Ethnology, Role of Religion, Religion, Evolution
MOSAIC, 1979
Patterns among human hunter-gatherers and non-human social animals suggest patterns of early hominid social development. (BB)
Descriptors: Anthropology, Cultural Context, Ethnology, Evolution
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Hefner, Philip – NAMTA Journal, 1998
Argues that culture and religion are deeply rooted in human beings and it is their task to understand how this is so and what difference it makes. Asserts that human consciousness must organize itself so that it can identify its most "life-giving" form and thereby continue to direct its own evolution. (Author)
Descriptors: Beliefs, Cultural Awareness, Cultural Context, Cultural Education
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