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Showing all 11 results Save | Export
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Barnes, M. Elizabeth; Misheva, Taya; Supriya, K.; Rutledge, Michael; Brownell, Sara E. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2022
Hundreds of articles have explored the extent to which individuals accept evolution, and the Measure of Acceptance of the Theory of Evolution (MATE) is the most often used survey. However, research indicates the MATE has limitations, and it has not been updated since its creation more than 20 years ago. In this study, we revised the MATE using…
Descriptors: Evolution, Measures (Individuals), Knowledge Level, Scientific Principles
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Lindsay, John; Arok, Adhieu; Bybee, Seth M.; Cho, Walter; Cordero, April Maskiewicz; Ferguson, Daniel G.; Galante, Leontine L.; Gill, Richard; Mann, Mark; Peck, Steven L.; Shively, Cassidy L.; Stark, Michael R.; Stowers, Joshua A.; Tenneson, Michael; Tolman, Ethan R.; Wayment, Thomas; Jensen, Jamie L. – CBE - Life Sciences Education, 2019
Too many students reject the theory of evolution because they view it as incompatible with their religious beliefs. Some have argued that abandoning religious belief is the only way to help religious individuals accept evolution. Conversely, our data support that highlighting faith/evolution compatibility is an effective means to increase student…
Descriptors: College Students, Church Related Colleges, Religious Factors, Beliefs
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Bloom, Mark A.; Binns, Ian C.; Meadows, Lee – Electronic Journal for Research in Science & Mathematics Education, 2021
In this manuscript, three science educators describe strategies used to effectively communicate about religiously and culturally sensitive science content and share lessons learned from their experiences. Mark A. Bloom (2019-2021 Fellow) describes the challenges he overcame in teaching climate change science at an evangelical university by…
Descriptors: Religion, Cultural Differences, Science Instruction, Christianity
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Fulford, Janice Marie; Rudge, David Wÿss – Science & Education, 2016
The phenomenon of industrial melanism (IM) became widely acknowledged as a well-documented example of natural selection largely as a result of H.B.D. Kettlewell's pioneering research on the subject in the early 1950s. It was quickly picked up by American biology textbooks starting in the early 1960s and became ubiquitous throughout the 1970s,…
Descriptors: Biology, Textbooks, Evolution, Phenomenology
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Aydin, Serap Öz – American Biology Teacher, 2015
For many students, preconceived notions about Darwin are among the most significant obstacles in learning about the theory of evolution by natural selection. I present an activity designed to eliminate this obstacle and encourage empathizing with Darwin, utilizing the history-of-science approach. Through the activity, students' negative thoughts…
Descriptors: Scientific Concepts, Scientific Literacy, Scientific Principles, Evolution
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Coleman, Joy; Stears, Michèle; Dempster, Edith – South African Journal of Education, 2015
The focus of this study was student teachers at a South African university enrolled in a Bachelor of Education (B.Ed.) programme and a Postgraduate Certificate in Education (PGCE), respectively. The purpose of this study was to explore students' understanding and acceptance of evolution and beliefs about the nature of science (NOS), and to…
Descriptors: Student Teacher Attitudes, Scientific Principles, Scientific Concepts, Evolution
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Notzer, Netta; Abramovitz, Ruth – Anatomical Sciences Education, 2012
The Anatomy Department at Tel-Aviv University Medical School offers its students an elective course of 26 didactic hours on human evolution. The course is open to students from all faculties, who must fulfill all academic requirements, without a prerequisite of a background in anatomy. Approximately 120 students attend annually, a third of them…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Anatomy, Human Body, Evolution
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Rutledge, Michael L.; Sadler, Kim Cleary – Journal of College Science Teaching, 2011
Understanding students' thinking about scientific theories is fundamental to the development of effective instructional strategies designed to foster scientific literacy. We conducted a study to determine student acceptance of important biological theories and to explore the relationships between their acceptance of scientific theories and their…
Descriptors: Educational Strategies, Evolution, Scientific Principles, Biology
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Bickmore, Barry R.; Thompson, Kirsten R.; Grandy, David A.; Tomlin, Teagan – Journal of Geoscience Education, 2009
Science instructors, even at the college level, are routinely confronted with two facts about their students. First, most of their students have a poor understanding of the nature of science (NOS). Second, many of their students have religious objections to particular scientific theories that seem to cripple their ability to learn about, or even…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Scientific Principles, Religion, College Students
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Hokayem, Hayat; BouJaoude, Saouma – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2008
Although a well-corroborated scientific theory, the theory of evolution has continued to cause dilemmas for some individuals who have not easily been able to accommodate the concepts of this theory within their cognitive culture. The reason lies in the overlap of some ideas that the theory advocates with other social, epistemological, and…
Descriptors: Evolution, Student Attitudes, Biology, College Students
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Shtulman, Andrew – Cognitive Psychology, 2006
Philosophers of biology have long argued that Darwin's theory of evolution was qualitatively different from all earlier theories of evolution. Whereas Darwin's predecessors and contemporaries explained adaptation as the transformation of a species' ''essence,'' Darwin explained adaptation as the selective propagation of randomly occurring…
Descriptors: High School Students, College Students, Scientists, Biology