Today's youth will face global environmental changes, as well as
complex personal and social challenges. To address these issues
this collection of essays provides vital insights on how science
education can be designed to better engage students and help them
solve important problems in the world around them.
"Assessing Schools for Generation R (Responsibility)" includes
theories, research, and practices for envisioning how science and
environmental education can promote personal, social, and civic
responsibility. It brings together inspiring stories, creative
practices, and theoretical work to make the case that science
education can be reformed so that students learn to meaningfully
apply the concepts they learn in science classes across America and
grow into civically engaged citizens. The book calls for a
curriculum that equips students with the knowledge, skills,
attitudes and values to confront the complex and often ill-defined
socioscientific issues of daily life.
The authors are all experienced educators and top experts in the
fields of science and environmental education, ecology,
experiential education, educational philosophy, policy and history.
They examine what has to happen in the domains of teacher
preparation and public education to effect a transition of the
youth of America.
This exciting, informative, sophisticated and sometimes
provocative book will stimulate much debate about the future
direction of science education in America, and the rest of the
world. It is ideal reading for all school superintendents, deans,
faculty, and policymakers looking for a way to implement a
curriculum that helps builds students into responsible and engaged
citizens."
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