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Opfer, John E.; Nehm, Ross H.; Ha, Minsu – Journal of Research in Science Teaching, 2012
To improve assessments of academic achievement, test developers have been urged to use an "assessment triangle" that starts with research-based models of cognition and learning [NRC (2001) "Knowing what students know: The science and design of educational assessment." Washington, DC: National Academy Press]. This approach has been successful in…
Descriptors: Science Tests, Evolution, Biology, Test Construction
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Depaepe, Marc; De Bont, Raf; Dams, Kristof – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2012
On the basis of their individual preliminary studies, the authors consider in this article the impact of Darwinism on psycho-pedagogical constructs in Belgium in the period before the Second World War. Their findings are put together around three positions, which are, in fact, hypotheses for further research: (1) The "influence" of…
Descriptors: Evolution, Catholics, Social Sciences, Foreign Countries
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Nehm, Ross H.; Beggrow, Elizabeth P.; Opfer, John E.; Ha, Minsu – American Biology Teacher, 2012
Studies of students' thinking about natural selection have revealed that the scenarios in which students reason evoke different types, magnitudes, and arrangements of knowledge elements and misconceptions. Diagnostic tests are needed that probe students' thinking across a representative array of evolutionary contexts. The ACORNS is a diagnostic…
Descriptors: Evolution, Diagnostic Tests, Misconceptions, Inferences
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Rau, Gerald – Science Teacher, 2012
Molecular similarity is one of the strongest lines of evidence for evolution--and one of the most difficult for students to grasp. That is because the underlying observations--that identical mutations are found in closely related species and the degree of similarity decreases with evolutionary distance--are not visible to the human eye. And it's…
Descriptors: Evolution, Genetics, Molecular Structure, Scientific Concepts
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Yasri, Pratchayapong; Mancy, Rebecca – International Journal of Science Education, 2014
This study investigates a range of positions that learners take on the relationship between science and religion and the potential for these positions to explain student approaches when learning about evolution. A phenomenographic study based on interviews with nine students studying in Christian high schools in Thailand led to the identification…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Science and Society, Science Instruction, Evolution
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Bybee, Rodger W. – Science and Children, 2013
Publication of the "Next Generation Science Standards" will be just short of two decades since publication of the "National Science Education Standards" (NRC 1996). In that time, biology and science education communities have advanced, and the new standards will reflect that progress (NRC 1999, 2007, 2009; Kress and Barrett…
Descriptors: Biological Sciences, Academic Standards, Elementary School Science, Secondary School Science
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Tansey, John T.; Baird, Teaster, Jr.; Cox, Michael M.; Fox, Kristin M.; Knight, Jennifer; Sears, Duane; Bell, Ellis – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2013
Over the past two years, through an NSF RCN UBE grant, the ASBMB has held regional workshops for faculty members and science educators from around the country that focused on identifying: 1) core principles of biochemistry and molecular biology, 2) essential concepts and underlying theories from physics, chemistry, and mathematics, and 3)…
Descriptors: Biochemistry, Molecular Biology, Science Instruction, College Science
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Miralles, Laura; Moran, Paloma; Dopico, Eduardo; Garcia-Vazquez, Eva – Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education, 2013
Evolution is a main concept in biology, but not many students understand how it works. In this article we introduce the game "DNA Re-EvolutioN" as an active learning tool that uses genetic concepts (DNA structure, transcription and translation, mutations, natural selection, etc.) as playing rules. Students will learn about molecular…
Descriptors: Evolution, Molecular Biology, Science Instruction, Educational Games
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Bindewald, Benjamin J. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2015
This article provides an overview of the socio-political, cultural, and historical characteristics of the relationship between conservative Christians and the American system of public education; describes the influence of fundamentalist views on contemporary conservative Christians; and recounts the historical relationship between the Religious…
Descriptors: Christianity, Religious Factors, Public Schools, Public Education
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Christensen, Bryce – Changing English: Studies in Culture and Education, 2011
The theory of memetic evolution--explaining the reproduction of cultural units called "memes"--illuminates the decline of poetry as a cultural presence by clarifying the contrasting attitudes towards poetry manifested by the co-discoverers of natural selection: Charles Darwin and Alfred Wallace. Darwin's eventual indifference to poetry…
Descriptors: Poetry, Attitude Change, Evolution, Scientific Research
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Krieshok, Thomas S.; Motl, Thomas C.; Rutt, Benjamin T. – Journal of Career Assessment, 2011
Vocational psychology has a long history of acting as a lens that focuses research in basic sciences on the particular experience of work in people's lives. This article presents several areas on the ascendancy in the broader scientific literature and ask how vocational psychology might apply them to issues of work in people's lives. The authors'…
Descriptors: Industrial Psychology, Scientific Research, Evolution, Brain
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Green, Jennifer H.; Koza, Anna; Moshynets, Olena; Pajor, Radoslaw; Ritchie, Margaret R.; Spiers, Andrew J. – Journal of Biological Education, 2011
Understanding evolutionary mechanisms is fundamental to a balanced biological education, yet practical demonstrations are rarely considered. In this paper we describe a bacterial liquid microcosm which can be used to demonstrate aspects of evolution, namely adaptive radiation, niche colonisation and competitive fitness. In microcosms inoculated…
Descriptors: Evolution, Molecular Biology, Biology, Science Instruction
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Long, David E. – Learning and Teaching: The International Journal of Higher Education in the Social Sciences, 2014
In an ethnographic study set within a biology department of a public university in the United States, incongruity between the ideals and practice of science education are investigated. Against the background of religious conservative students' complaints about evolution in the curriculum, biology faculty describe their political intents for…
Descriptors: Biology, Departments, Science Careers, Ethnography
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Dennis, Mike; Duggan, Adrienne; McGregor, Deb – Primary Science, 2014
Evolution and inheritance appear in the new National Science Curriculum for England, which comes into effect from September 2014. In the curriculum documents, it is expected that pupils in year 6 (ages 10-11) should be taught to: (1) recognise that living things have changed over time; (2) recognise that living things produce offspring of the same…
Descriptors: Science Instruction, Evolution, Science Curriculum, Grade 6
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Stanger-Hall, Kathrin F.; Wenner, Julianne A. – American Biology Teacher, 2014
We assessed the performance of students with a self-reported conflict between their religious belief and the theory of evolution in two sections of a large introductory biology course (N = 373 students). Student performance was measured through pretest and posttest evolution essays and multiple- choice (MC) questions (evolution-related and…
Descriptors: Evolution, Religion, Conflict, Beliefs
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