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Who were the pioneers in science education, and what motivated them
to do what they did?" This book is the second volume of an attempt
to capture and record some of the answers to these questions-either
from the pioneers themselves or from those persons who worked most
closely with them. As with the first volume, we have attempted to
include as many pioneers as possible, but we know that there are
still many that are not included in this or the previous volume. As
we have posed questions, rummaged through files and oft?neglected
books, and probed the memories of many individuals, we have come to
realize our list of true pioneers is ever growing. As we consider
our list of pioneers, we know that there are names on the list that
most of us readily recognize. We also fully realize that there are
names of whom few of us have heard-yet who were significant in
their roles as mentors or idea development and teaching. We
continue to be impressed with our science education "family tree"
ever branching out to more individuals and connections. The stories
in this volume continue to demonstrate how vital this network was
in supporting the individual pioneers during their journey in
difficult times and continues to be for those of us today in our
own enterprise.
This book examines visual data use with students (PK-16) as well as
in pre-service in- service science teacher preparation. Each
chapter includes discussion about the current state of the art with
respect to science classroom application and utilization of the
particular visual data targeted by the author(s), discussion and
explanation about the targeted visual data as applied by the author
in his/her classroom, use of visual data as a diagnostic tool, its
use as an assessment tool, and discussion of implications for
science teaching and/or science teacher preparation. Although the
body of research and practice in this field is growing, there
remains a gap in the literature about clearly explicating the use
of visual data in the science classroom. A growing body of
literature discusses what visual data are (although this topic is
still viewed as being at the beginning of its development in
educators' thinking), and there are some scattered examples of
studies exploring the use of visual data in science classrooms,
although those studies have not necessarily clearly identified
their foci as visual data, per se. As interest and attention has
become more focused on visual data, a logical progression of
questioning has been how visual data are actually applied in the
science classroom, whether it be early elementary, college, or
somewhere in between. Visual data applications of interest to the
science education community include how it is identified, how it
can be used with students and how students can generate it
themselves, how it can be employed as a diagnostic tool in concept
development, and how it can be utilized as an assessment tool. This
book explores that, as well as a variety of pragmatic ways to help
science educators more effectively utilize visual data and
representations in their instruction.
Addressing Social Issues in the Classroom and Beyond: The
Pedagogical Efforts of Pioneers in the Field is comprised of essays
that delineate the genesis and evolution of the thought and work of
pioneers in the field of social issues and education. The authors
(many of whom, themselves, are noted professors of education and
who have done significant work in the field of social issues and
education) delineate and analyze the efforts (e.g., theoretical
work, research, curriculum development, and teaching) of such
pioneers within the larger framework of their life-story. As a
result, the reader is not only introduced to the significant work
of each pioneer but valuable and often fascinating insights into
how his/her life experiences informed his/her thinking, beliefs,
goals and work. This book constitutes a rich and unusual record of
the thinking and accomplishments of those luminaries who worked
tirelessly in the belief that a well-educated and well-informed
populace was absolutely imperative in a democracy if the latter
were to remain healthy and vibrant. Beyond current scholars and
students, we believe that this book will be of great interest to a
wide spectrum of individuals: teacher educators who perceive the
need to avail their students of the rich history, rationales and
methods for incorporating the study of social issues across the
curriculum; professors who teach history of curriculum courses
and/or history of education courses are likely to be drawn to the
book, both for the rich stories as well as the bounty of
information found in each chapter; those who specialize in
autobiographical studies in the field of education are likely to
find the book to be remarkably rich and valuable both for their own
research as well as in their teaching; secondary level teachers in
science, social studies, and English who are interested in
incorporating the study of social issues into the courses they
teach will glean incredibly rich insights into why and how to go
about such an endeavor; and future scholars and students who care
deeply about how society impacts education, education impacts
society, and how individuals and groups can have a positive impact
on society through their collective efforts are bound to find the
book both fascinating and instructive.
A volume in Research in Curriculum and Instruction Series Editor:
O. L. Davis, Jr. The University of Texas at Austin Teaching and
Studying Social Issues: Major Programs and Approaches focuses on
many of the major innovations developed over the past 100 years by
noted educators to assist students in the study and analysis of key
social issues that impact their lives and society. This book
complements earlier books that address other aspects of studying
and addressing social issues in the secondary classroom:
Researching and Teaching Social Issues: The Personal Stories and
Pedagogical Efforts of Professors of Education (Lexington, Books,
2006); Addressing Social Issues in the Classroom and Beyond: The
Pedagogical Efforts of Pioneers in the Field (Information Age
Publishing, 2007); and Social Issues and Service at the Middle
Level (Information Age Publishers, 2009). The current book ranges
in scope from Harold Rugg's pioneering effort to develop textbooks
that purposely addressed key social issues (and thus provided
teachers and students with a major tool with which to examine
social issues in the classroom) to the relatively new efforts over
the last 20 to 30 years, including global education, environmental
education, Science/Technology/Society (STS), and genocide
education. This book provides the readers with details about the
innovators their innovations so they can (1) learn from past
efforts, particularly in regard to what worked and didn't work and
why, (2) glean new ideas, methods and approaches for use in their
own classrooms, and (3) craft new methods and approaches based on
the strengths of past innovations.
A volume in Research in Curriculum and Instruction Series Editor:
O. L. Davis, Jr. The University of Texas at Austin This volume is
the fourth, and last, volume in the series entitled Educating About
Social Issues in the 20th and 21st Centuries: An Annotated
Bibliography. Volumes I and Volume 2 focused on (1) the lives and
work of notable scholars dedicated to addressing why and how social
issues should become an integral component of the public school
curriculum, and (2) various topics/approaches vis-a-vis addressing
social issues in the classroom. Volume 3 addressed approaches to
incorporating social issues into the extant curricula that were not
addressed in the first two volumes. This volume, Volume Four,
focuses solely on critical pedagogy: both the lives and work of
major critical pedagogues and the different strains of critical
pedagogy the latter pursued (e.g., critical theory in education,
critical feminism in education, critical race theory).
Visual Data in Science Education builds upon previous work done by
the editors to bring some definition to the meaning of visual data
as it relates to education, and highlighted the breadth of types
and uses of visual data across the major academic disciplines. In
this book, the editors have brought this focus specifically to
science education through the contributions of colleagues in the
field who actively research about and engage in teaching with
visual data. The book begins by examining how the brain functions
with respect to processing visual data, then explores models of
conceptual frameworks, which then leads into how related ideas are
actuated in education settings ranging from elementary science
classrooms to college environments. As a whole, this book fosters a
more coherent image of the multifaceted process of science teaching
and learning that is informed by current understandings of science
knowledge construction, the scientific enterprise, and the
millennium student as they relate to visual data.
This volume will focus on a much need comparison of science teacher
preparation from around the world. In recent times (last 5 years)
much has been written and communicated both in the popular press
and within the annals of research oriented publications about the
performance of students international in math and science. Although
not a new discussion or debate, many countries are held as
exemplars in how they educate their youth and subsequently how they
educate their teachers. Given this situation and given the fact
that there is ample evidence to show that some countries youth
perform better on tests such as the Program for International
Student Assessment (PISA) and we know that teacher significantly
contribute to the performance of students, it is time that we look
at the specific attributes of teacher preparation worldwide.
Although this volume will not look at every country that is in the
comparator group for PISA and other measures, we have contacted
over 18 potential authors in the same number of countries in which
there is ample evidence to show successes regarding student
performance and quality teacher preparation programs. The intent of
the book is not just to report on the i?1/2successi?1/2 of each
nation. Rather the intent is to ask authors to take a critical look
at the process by which science teachers are educated and share
with the reader both the positive and negative aspects of such
preparation programs. For all 15 contributed chapters, the editors
have analyzed each and from this constructed from the
i?1/2datai?1/2 an analysis and report in a final chapter on the
exemplary qualities from various nations and make specific
recommendations regarding science teacher preparation for the
global community.
We no longer ascribe the term 'mermaid' to those we deem sexually
or economically threatening; we do not ubiquitously use the
mermaid's image in political propaganda or feature her within our
houses of worship; perhaps most notably, we do not entertain the
possibility of the mermaid's existence. This, author Tara Pedersen
argues, makes it difficult for contemporary scholars to consider
the mermaid as a figure who wields much social significance. During
the early modern period, however, this was not the case, and
Pedersen illustrates the complicated category distinctions that the
mermaid inhabits and challenges in 16th-and 17th-century England.
Addressing epistemological questions about embodiment and
perception, this study furthers research about early modern
theatrical culture by focusing on under-theorized and seldom
acknowledged representations of mermaids in English locations and
texts. While individuals in early modern England were under
pressure to conform to seemingly monolithic ideals about the
natural order, there were also significant challenges to this
order. Pedersen uses the figure of the mermaid to rethink some of
these challenges, for the mermaid often appears in surprising
places; she is situated at the nexus of historically specific
debates about gender, sexuality, religion, the marketplace, the new
science, and the culture of curiosity and travel. Although these
topics of inquiry are not new, Pedersen argues that the mermaid
provides a new lens through which to look at these subjects and
also helps scholars think about the present moment, methodologies
of reading, and many category distinctions that are important to
contemporary scholarly debates.
Original essays by noted scholars explore cooperative learning,
curriculum development, and teaching strategies. Focusing on grades
9 through 12, the volume first emphasizes theories underlying the
use of selected cooperative learning strategies in secondary
schools and then examines strategies and practical applications for
classrooms. Contributors include David Johnson, Roger Johnson,
Ruven Lazarowitz, Yael Sharan, Shlomo Sharan, Robert Slavin, Karl
Smith, and others who have successfully implemented cooperative
learning strategies in science, math, social studies,
English/language arts, and gifted and talented. These contributors
focus on how models are utilized and implemented. Discussions
involve obstacles that impede success, problems and concerns,
solutions, and suggestions for problem solving. An index is
provided.
The Pros and Cons of Cancer Registration E. Grundmann It may seem
strange for somebody to hold a symposium on cancer regis tration
and then submit a paper under the heading "The Pros and Cons of
Cancer Registration." Indeed, this may be quite amazing to those of
my colleagues who have been endeavoring for years or decades to
provide a world-wide system of cancer registration. To be quite
frank, this is exactly what I intended. Generally speaking, as
scientists we are convinced that the work we do is worth while. We
are in fact supported in this attitude by pub lic opinion, if one
bears in mind that science is future-oriented. It may be said that
science is a way for building the future, and that
progressive-mindedness is - to use a modern word - "in." Never
theless, we may somehow hesitate at this fashionable word. After
all, science is not "in" in the way this word is interpreted by the
younger generation. Indeed, this younger generation is much too
sceptical whenever confronted with anything done by the older
generation - and science is pursued primarily by the
"establishment." Rather, it is "in" to criticize the system of
society and, if possible, to overcome this system, which is
responsible not only for many evils, but also for many illnesses."
Mobile telephony has arrived on the scene.According to statistics
of the International Telecommunications Union, in the mid-1990s,
less than one person in 20 had a mobile telephone; as of 2003, this
had risen to on p- son in five.In the mid-1990s, the GSM system was
just being commerci- ized, there were serious coverage and
interoperability issues that were not yet sorted out and handsets
were only beginning to be something that did not require a car to
transport them.In the mid-1990s, if a teen owned a mobile telephone
it was likely an indicator of an over-pampered rich kid rather than
today's sense that it is a more or less essential part of a teen's
everyday identity kit. Hence, in less than a decade, this device
has established itself tech- cally, commercially, socially and in
the imagination of the people.It has changed the way we think about
communication, coordination and safety and it has changed the way
we behave in the public sphere. The mobile telephone has become an
element in our sense of public and private space and in the
development of our social and psychological personas.It has become
an arena wherein the language is being played with, morphed and
extended.Finally, it is reaching out into ever-new areas of
commerce and interaction. All of this is, of course, interesting to
social scientists.As brought out by Woolgar later, this is, in some
ways, a type of experiment writ large that has engendered serious
insight into the functioning of the social group and the individual
in soc
Focuses on many of the major innovations developed over the past
100 years by noted educators to assist students in the study and
analysis of key social issues that impact their lives and society.
This book includes the pioneering efforts to develop textbooks that
purposely address key social issues, to the relatively new efforts
over the last 20 to 30 years, including global education,
environmental education, Science/Technology/Society (STS), and
genocide education.
This volume will focus on a much need comparison of science teacher
preparation from around the world. In recent times (last 5 years)
much has been written and communicated both in the popular press
and within the annals of research oriented publications about the
performance of students international in math and science. Although
not a new discussion or debate, many countries are held as
exemplars in how they educate their youth and subsequently how they
educate their teachers. Given this situation and given the fact
that there is ample evidence to show that some countries youth
perform better on tests such as the Program for International
Student Assessment (PISA) and we know that teacher significantly
contribute to the performance of students, it is time that we look
at the specific attributes of teacher preparation worldwide.
Although this volume will not look at every country that is in the
comparator group for PISA and other measures, we have contacted
over 18 potential authors in the same number of countries in which
there is ample evidence to show successes regarding student
performance and quality teacher preparation programs. The intent of
the book is not just to report on the i?1/2successi?1/2 of each
nation. Rather the intent is to ask authors to take a critical look
at the process by which science teachers are educated and share
with the reader both the positive and negative aspects of such
preparation programs. For all 15 contributed chapters, the editors
have analyzed each and from this constructed from the
i?1/2datai?1/2 an analysis and report in a final chapter on the
exemplary qualities from various nations and make specific
recommendations regarding science teacher preparation for the
global community.
This book examines visual data use with students (PK-16) as well as
in pre-service in- service science teacher preparation. Each
chapter includes discussion about the current state of the art with
respect to science classroom application and utilization of the
particular visual data targeted by the author(s), discussion and
explanation about the targeted visual data as applied by the author
in his/her classroom, use of visual data as a diagnostic tool, its
use as an assessment tool, and discussion of implications for
science teaching and/or science teacher preparation. Although the
body of research and practice in this field is growing, there
remains a gap in the literature about clearly explicating the use
of visual data in the science classroom. A growing body of
literature discusses what visual data are (although this topic is
still viewed as being at the beginning of its development in
educators' thinking), and there are some scattered examples of
studies exploring the use of visual data in science classrooms,
although those studies have not necessarily clearly identified
their foci as visual data, per se. As interest and attention has
become more focused on visual data, a logical progression of
questioning has been how visual data are actually applied in the
science classroom, whether it be early elementary, college, or
somewhere in between. Visual data applications of interest to the
science education community include how it is identified, how it
can be used with students and how students can generate it
themselves, how it can be employed as a diagnostic tool in concept
development, and how it can be utilized as an assessment tool. This
book explores that, as well as a variety of pragmatic ways to help
science educators more effectively utilize visual data and
representations in their instruction.
Who were the pioneers in science education, and what motivated them
to do what they did?" This book is the second volume of an attempt
to capture and record some of the answers to these questions-either
from the pioneers themselves or from those persons who worked most
closely with them. As with the first volume, we have attempted to
include as many pioneers as possible, but we know that there are
still many that are not included in this or the previous volume. As
we have posed questions, rummaged through files and oft?neglected
books, and probed the memories of many individuals, we have come to
realize our list of true pioneers is ever growing. As we consider
our list of pioneers, we know that there are names on the list that
most of us readily recognize. We also fully realize that there are
names of whom few of us have heard-yet who were significant in
their roles as mentors or idea development and teaching. We
continue to be impressed with our science education "family tree"
ever branching out to more individuals and connections. The stories
in this volume continue to demonstrate how vital this network was
in supporting the individual pioneers during their journey in
difficult times and continues to be for those of us today in our
own enterprise.
A volume in Research in Curriculum and Instruction Series Editor:
O. L. Davis, Jr. The University of Texas at Austin This volume is
the fourth, and last, volume in the series entitled Educating About
Social Issues in the 20th and 21st Centuries: An Annotated
Bibliography. Volumes I and Volume 2 focused on (1) the lives and
work of notable scholars dedicated to addressing why and how social
issues should become an integral component of the public school
curriculum, and (2) various topics/approaches vis-a-vis addressing
social issues in the classroom. Volume 3 addressed approaches to
incorporating social issues into the extant curricula that were not
addressed in the first two volumes. This volume, Volume Four,
focuses solely on critical pedagogy: both the lives and work of
major critical pedagogues and the different strains of critical
pedagogy the latter pursued (e.g., critical theory in education,
critical feminism in education, critical race theory).
Researching and Teaching Social Issues: The Personal Stories and
Pedagogical Efforts of Professors of Education is comprised of
original personal essays in which notable teacher educators
delineate the genesis and evolution of their thought and work
vis-a-vis the teaching of social issues. In relating their personal
stories, the authors were asked to discuss among other issues those
individuals and/or scholarly works that have most influenced them
and how, their own aspirations in the field, the frustrations they
have faced, their perceptions of the field, their major
contributions, and their current endeavours. Our goal was that each
and every story be as informative, instructive, and engaging as
possible. We believe that readers will be thoroughly engaged as
they read the stories of these individuals-stories that are
inspiring, filled with passion, and reflective in nature. We also
believe that readers will gain unique pedagogical insights into the
field and ample food for thought. The individuals selected for
inclusion in the book dedicated a great amount of time, thought,
energy, and commitment to creating powerful and pedagogically sound
ways to teach about social and/or controversial issues. Many have
done so for well over forty years, and have been among the
strongest advocates vis-a-vis the place social issues have in the
extant curriculum and beyond. CONTENTS Introduction by Samuel
Totten and Jon E. Pedersen. Education, Politics, and Social
Transformation, Michael W. Apple. Human Ecology and Science
Education Policies and Programs: Reflections on Social Activism,
Roger W. Bybee. Forty Days and Forty Nights in the Wilderness of
Capitalist Schooling, Ronald W. Evans. Becoming Political: One
Woman's Story, Carole L. Hahn. The Unending Quest for Social Issues
in the Schools: A Personal Narrative, Byron G. Massialas. Social
Justice, Alex Molnar. My Experience with Social Issues and
Education, Fred M. Newmann. Social Issues and Decision Making: A
Career Long Commitment, Anna S. Ochoa-Becker. The Evolution of an
Educator, Jon E. Pedersen. A Happenstance-Based Social Issues
Career, James P. Shaver. Serendipity: A Paradigm Shifter's Friend
in Academia, Barbara Solomon Spector. A Synergy of Awareness,
Understanding, Empathy and Action: Confronting Social Issues in the
English Classroom and Beyond, Samuel Totten. Socials Issues as
Contexts for Science and Technology Education, Robert E. Yager.
Selected Bibliography. Index.
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