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Kazimierska-Jerzyk, Wioletta – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2023
Dissent has its own special place in art education. It has two stereotypical, polarized faces. The first is a classical institution modelled on Italian and French academies. As official places, they aimed at elevating art to the rank of science and making it an expression and instrument of power. The opposite image of the school is an oasis of…
Descriptors: Art Education, Educational Philosophy, Dissent, Moral Values
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Ramírez-Andreotta, Mónica D.; Buxner, Sanlyn; Sandhaus, Shana – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2023
Social, political, and cultural complexities observed in environmental justice (EJ) communities require new forms of investigation, science teaching, and communication. Defined broadly, participatory approaches can challenge and change inequity and mistrust in science. Here, we describe Project Harvest and the partnership building and…
Descriptors: Conservation (Environment), Science Education, Pollution, Social Justice
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Bopardikar, Anushree; Bernstein, Debra; McKenney, Susan – Instructional Science: An International Journal of the Learning Sciences, 2023
Student-Teacher-Scientist Partnerships (STSPs) provide opportunities for students and teachers to participate in citizen science and engage with scientific concepts and practices, thereby bridging school learning with issues of importance to society, such as climate change. But STSPs require partners to cross boundaries between the cultures of…
Descriptors: Partnerships in Education, Citizen Participation, Scientific Concepts, Environmental Education
Dionne Gerri Wilson – ProQuest LLC, 2023
There is a dominant Discourse that juxtaposes science and Black cultures. This Discourse limits who can be a scientist and creates a racist, seemingly objective landscape in which Black individuals must persevere. This study examines how Black learners perceive their developing racial, scientific, and positional identities within a Black-centered…
Descriptors: Scientists, Blacks, African Americans, STEM Education
Sara T. R. Velasquez; Roslyn Nimmo; Teena Pookayil; Christopher Lydon; Debra Willison; Fraser J. Scott – Journal of Chemical Education, 2023
Women, ethnic minority, and less affluent groups are widely underrepresented in chemistry, a problem that is observed at all levels but begins before college matriculation takes place. The importance of representation and humanization of scientists is crucial. Despite limited progress over recent decades, poor visibility of role models from…
Descriptors: Chemistry, STEM Careers, Career Development, Disproportionate Representation
Patzelt, Suzanne Poole – ProQuest LLC, 2023
This study investigated how the figured world of the RET, and other figured worlds of science that teacher's experience, impacted their conceptions around the nature of science and their identities in science and as science teachers. The main premise behind RET programs is that by partnering science teachers with scientists as mentors, science…
Descriptors: Ecology, Feminism, Science Teachers, Teacher Researchers
Mary Theresa Walsh – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Success in STEM-based fields provides a path to highly regarded and powerful positions in society. Hegemonic structures of society have excluded women and other non-hegemonic groups from these fields and from recognition in these fields. Between 1903 and 2018 the Nobel Prize for Physics was awarded 113 times to 212 individuals. Marie Curie was…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Females, Sex, Physics
Caitlin Renea Anderson – ProQuest LLC, 2024
The field of biology is becoming increasingly fragmented, and this fragmentation spills over into the ways our students think and learn about biology. Biology education policy documents stress the importance of teaching biology in an integrated manner and call for the biology education research community to establish a unifying paradigm for the…
Descriptors: Systems Approach, Undergraduate Students, Biology, Science Education
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Dana Kube; Joshua Weidlich; Karel Kreijns; Hendrik Drachsler – Education and Information Technologies, 2024
Gender bias underlying discrimination against women are particularly salient in STEM higher education. Complementing top-down measures to mitigate these issues identified in the extant literature, we aim to highlight a complementary bottom-up approach. First, to elicit gender stereotypes and gender bias in STEM, we conducted a group concept…
Descriptors: STEM Education, Gender Bias, Females, Scientists
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Kathleen Rodgers; Willow Scobie – Teaching Sociology, 2024
Teaching introductory sociology is one of the primary means by which sociologists mobilize knowledge. Ongoing critical reflection on the content of sociology textbooks is therefore an important disciplinary enterprise. The current critical moment in which many nations, institutions, and publics face a reckoning with their historic and current…
Descriptors: Introductory Courses, Sociology, Textbooks, Textbook Content
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Shan Qiao; Daniela B. Friedman; Cheuk Chi Tam; Chengbo Zeng; Xiaoming Li – Journal of American College Health, 2024
Background: For college students who are exposed to multimedia, the sources of COVID-19 vaccine information and their trust in these sources may play a role in shaping the vaccine acceptance spectrum (refusal, hesitancy, and acceptance). Methods: Based on an online survey among 1,062 college students in South Carolina, we investigated vaccine…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Trust (Psychology), Immunization Programs
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Israt-Zahan Chowdhury; Aisha Sharif; Lesley A. Howell; Tippu S. Sheriff – Journal of Chemical Education, 2024
There is widespread interest in diversifying and decolonizing the chemistry curricula in higher education. However, this is not reflected in the curricula taught to students prior to coming to university. We describe the results of an online survey of 185 secondary school/college teachers and students (>18 years) and, separately, 79 members of…
Descriptors: Chemistry, Science Curriculum, Scientists, Minority Groups
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Katherine R. McCance; Margaret Blanchard – AERA Open, 2024
Interdisciplinarity has the potential to lead to more innovation and advances in knowledge than are possible from a single discipline. Yet, little is known about interdisciplinary collaborations and the perceptions of those involved. This quantitative study investigated the perceptions of U.S. faculty, staff, postdocs, and graduate students…
Descriptors: Interdisciplinary Approach, Cooperation, Partnerships in Education, Scientists
Nic Bennett – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Science communication can share liberatory ideas or reproduce dominant narratives, perpetuating marginalization (Freire, 2018). Currently, science communication efforts tend to advantage privileged and dominant groups of people (e.g., white, male, cis, heterosexual, non-disabled, neurotypical, affluent) (Canfield & Menezes, 2020; Medin &…
Descriptors: Graduate Students, STEM Education, Communication Skills, Interpersonal Communication
Liam G. McDermott – ProQuest LLC, 2024
Neurodiversity is the celebration of the diversity of minds. It is the understanding that people think, sense, and behave in different ways, and the assertion that the non-normative ways which people and their minds operate are, in fact, good. Neurodivergent people are beginning to access higher education at much higher rates than ever before.…
Descriptors: Physics, Neurodevelopmental Disorders, STEM Education, Self Concept
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