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A rich array of social and cultural theories constitutes a solid
foundation that affords unique insights into teaching and learning
science and learning to teach science. The approach moves beyond
studies in which emotion, cognition, and context are often regarded
as independent. Collaborative studies advance theory and resolve
practical problems, such as enhancing learning by managing excess
emotions and successfully regulating negative emotions. Multilevel
studies address a range of timely issues, including emotional
energy, discrete emotions, emotion regulation, and a host of issues
that arose, such as managing negative emotions like frustration and
anxiety, dealing with disruptive students, and regulating negative
emotions such as frustration, embarrassment, disgust, shame, and
anger. A significant outcome is that teachers can play an important
role in supporting students to successfully regulate negative
emotions and support learning. The book contains a wealth of
cutting edge methodologies and methods that will be useful to
researchers and the issues addressed are central to teaching and
learning in a global context. A unifying methodology is the use of
classroom events as the unit for analysis in research that connects
to the interests of teacher educators, teachers, and researchers
who can adapt what we have done and learned, and apply it in their
local contexts. Event-oriented inquiry highlights the
transformative potential of research and provides catchy narratives
and contextually rich events that have salience to the everyday
practices of teachers, teacher educators, and researchers. Methods
used in the research include emotion diaries in which students keep
a log of their emotions, clickers to measure in-the-moment
emotional climate, and uses of cogenerative dialogue, which caters
to diverse voices of students and teachers.
A rich array of social and cultural theories constitutes a solid
foundation that affords unique insights into teaching and learning
science and learning to teach science. The approach moves beyond
studies in which emotion, cognition, and context are often regarded
as independent. Collaborative studies advance theory and resolve
practical problems, such as enhancing learning by managing excess
emotions and successfully regulating negative emotions. Multilevel
studies address a range of timely issues, including emotional
energy, discrete emotions, emotion regulation, and a host of issues
that arose, such as managing negative emotions like frustration and
anxiety, dealing with disruptive students, and regulating negative
emotions such as frustration, embarrassment, disgust, shame, and
anger. A significant outcome is that teachers can play an important
role in supporting students to successfully regulate negative
emotions and support learning. The book contains a wealth of
cutting edge methodologies and methods that will be useful to
researchers and the issues addressed are central to teaching and
learning in a global context. A unifying methodology is the use of
classroom events as the unit for analysis in research that connects
to the interests of teacher educators, teachers, and researchers
who can adapt what we have done and learned, and apply it in their
local contexts. Event-oriented inquiry highlights the
transformative potential of research and provides catchy narratives
and contextually rich events that have salience to the everyday
practices of teachers, teacher educators, and researchers. Methods
used in the research include emotion diaries in which students keep
a log of their emotions, clickers to measure in-the-moment
emotional climate, and uses of cogenerative dialogue, which caters
to diverse voices of students and teachers.
Critical Issues and Bold Visions for Science Education contains 16
chapters written by 32 authors from 11 countries. The book is
intended for a broad audience of teachers, teacher educators,
researchers, and policymakers. Interesting perspectives,
challenging problems, and fresh solutions grounded in cutting edge
theory and research are presented, interrogated, elaborated and,
while retaining complexity, offer transformative visions within a
context of political tensions, historical legacies, and grand
challenges associated with Anthropocene (e.g., sustainability,
climate change, mass extinctions). Within overarching sociocultural
frameworks, authors address diverse critical issues using rich
theoretical frameworks and methodologies suited to research today
and a necessity to make a difference while ensuring that all
participants benefit from research and high standards of ethical
conduct. The focus of education is broad, encompassing teaching,
learning and curriculum in pre-k-12 schools, museums and other
informal institutions, community gardens, and cheeseworld. Teaching
and learning are considered for a wide range of ages, languages,
and nationalities. An important stance that permeates the book is
that research is an activity from which all participants learn,
benefit, and transform personal and community practices.
Transformation is an integral part of research in science
education. Contributors are: Jennifer Adams, Arnau Amat, Lucy
Avraamidou, Marcilia Elis Barcellos, Alberto Bellocchi, Mitch
Bleier, Lynn A. Bryan, Helen Douglass, Colin Hennessy Elliott,
Alejandro J. Gallard Martinez, Elisabeth Goncalves de Souza, Da
Yeon Kang, Shakhnoza Kayumova, Shruti Krishnamoorthy, Ralph
Levinson, Sonya N. Martin, Jordan McKenzie, Kathy Mills, Catherine
Milne, Ashley Morton, Masakata Ogawa, Rebecca Olson, Roger Patulny,
Chantal Pouliot, Leah D. Pride, Anton Puvirajah, S. Lizette Ramos
de Robles, Kathryn Scantlebury, Glauco S. F. da Silva, Michael Tan,
Kenneth Tobin, and Geeta Verma.
Critical Issues and Bold Visions for Science Education contains 16
chapters written by 32 authors from 11 countries. The book is
intended for a broad audience of teachers, teacher educators,
researchers, and policymakers. Interesting perspectives,
challenging problems, and fresh solutions grounded in cutting edge
theory and research are presented, interrogated, elaborated and,
while retaining complexity, offer transformative visions within a
context of political tensions, historical legacies, and grand
challenges associated with Anthropocene (e.g., sustainability,
climate change, mass extinctions). Within overarching sociocultural
frameworks, authors address diverse critical issues using rich
theoretical frameworks and methodologies suited to research today
and a necessity to make a difference while ensuring that all
participants benefit from research and high standards of ethical
conduct. The focus of education is broad, encompassing teaching,
learning and curriculum in pre-k-12 schools, museums and other
informal institutions, community gardens, and cheeseworld. Teaching
and learning are considered for a wide range of ages, languages,
and nationalities. An important stance that permeates the book is
that research is an activity from which all participants learn,
benefit, and transform personal and community practices.
Transformation is an integral part of research in science
education. Contributors are: Jennifer Adams, Arnau Amat, Lucy
Avraamidou, Marcilia Elis Barcellos, Alberto Bellocchi, Mitch
Bleier, Lynn A. Bryan, Helen Douglass, Colin Hennessy Elliott,
Alejandro J. Gallard Martinez, Elisabeth Goncalves de Souza, Da
Yeon Kang, Shakhnoza Kayumova, Shruti Krishnamoorthy, Ralph
Levinson, Sonya N. Martin, Jordan McKenzie, Kathy Mills, Catherine
Milne, Ashley Morton, Masakata Ogawa, Rebecca Olson, Roger Patulny,
Chantal Pouliot, Leah D. Pride, Anton Puvirajah, S. Lizette Ramos
de Robles, Kathryn Scantlebury, Glauco S. F. da Silva, Michael Tan,
Kenneth Tobin, and Geeta Verma.
Contemplative Practices for Sustaining Wellness: Priorities for
Research and Education continues ongoing studies exploring
relationships between expressed emotions, physiological changes in
breathing patterns, blood circulation and wellness, and use of
interventions to live with chronic disease and, when possible,
restore healthy functioning of the body. Unique aspects of the
book's chapters include complementary approaches and practices for
self-care, caring for others, and harmonizing universal energy. To
ameliorate emotions and enhance wellness a variety of healing and
contemplative practices are discussed, including breathing
meditation and mindfulness in everyday activities. In so doing,
authors address a diverse set of critical issues, including
education, resilience, vulnerability, racism, misogyny, bigotry,
and poverty.
Contemplative Practices for Sustaining Wellness: Priorities for
Research and Education continues ongoing studies exploring
relationships between expressed emotions, physiological changes in
breathing patterns, blood circulation and wellness, and use of
interventions to live with chronic disease and, when possible,
restore healthy functioning of the body. Unique aspects of the
book's chapters include complementary approaches and practices for
self-care, caring for others, and harmonizing universal energy. To
ameliorate emotions and enhance wellness a variety of healing and
contemplative practices are discussed, including breathing
meditation and mindfulness in everyday activities. In so doing,
authors address a diverse set of critical issues, including
education, resilience, vulnerability, racism, misogyny, bigotry,
and poverty.
This book consists of 19 chapters on heuristics written by 21
diverse researchers. Heuristics are reflexive tools, designed to
heighten awareness of actions and thereby afford reflection and
other contemplative activities that can catalyze desired changes.
The 33 heuristics provided in the book have been produced, revised,
and adapted in more than two decades of scholarship. Six key foci
are addressed in Transforming Learning and Teaching: Heuristics for
Educative and Responsible Practices with respect to heuristics:
teaching and learning, learning to teach, emotions, wellness,
contemplative activities, and harmony. The book is an ideal
resource for researchers in education and the social sciences, and
an excellent text for graduate level courses in which research,
professional development and transformative change are goals.
This book consists of 19 chapters on heuristics written by 21
diverse researchers. Heuristics are reflexive tools, designed to
heighten awareness of actions and thereby afford reflection and
other contemplative activities that can catalyze desired changes.
The 33 heuristics provided in the book have been produced, revised,
and adapted in more than two decades of scholarship. Six key foci
are addressed in Transforming Learning and Teaching: Heuristics for
Educative and Responsible Practices with respect to heuristics:
teaching and learning, learning to teach, emotions, wellness,
contemplative activities, and harmony. The book is an ideal
resource for researchers in education and the social sciences, and
an excellent text for graduate level courses in which research,
professional development and transformative change are goals.
Doing Authentic Inquiry to Improve Learning and Teaching consists
of 18 chapters, and 19 authors from 4 countries. The book is suited
for use by educators, researchers and classroom practitioners
involved in teaching and learning, teacher education, and policy.
All chapters are grounded in urban contexts, but are broadly
applicable. Multilogical research highlights uses of sociocultural
theory, authentic, event-oriented, interpretive inquiry, narrative,
and willingness to learn from difference. Methodologies are
historically constituted, emergent, contingent, and participatory,
embracing collaborative, and contemplative practices, and value of
many voices and diverse meaning systems. Readers experience
research that is potentially both personally and professionally
transformative and applicable to today's challenges. Contributors
are: Jennifer D. Adams, Konstantinos Alexakos, Arnau Amat, Marissa
E. Bellino, Mitch Bleier, Corinna Yolanda Brathwaite, Olga
Calderon, Katelin Corbett, Amy DeFelice, Gene Fellner, Helen Kwah,
Manny Lopez, Anna Malyukova, Kate E. O'Hara, Malgorzata
Powietrzynska, Isabel Sellas, Kenneth Tobin, and Yau Yan Wong.
Doing Authentic Inquiry to Improve Learning and Teaching consists
of 18 chapters, and 19 authors from 4 countries. The book is suited
for use by educators, researchers and classroom practitioners
involved in teaching and learning, teacher education, and policy.
All chapters are grounded in urban contexts, but are broadly
applicable. Multilogical research highlights uses of sociocultural
theory, authentic, event-oriented, interpretive inquiry, narrative,
and willingness to learn from difference. Methodologies are
historically constituted, emergent, contingent, and participatory,
embracing collaborative, and contemplative practices, and value of
many voices and diverse meaning systems. Readers experience
research that is potentially both personally and professionally
transformative and applicable to today's challenges. Contributors
are: Jennifer D. Adams, Konstantinos Alexakos, Arnau Amat, Marissa
E. Bellino, Mitch Bleier, Corinna Yolanda Brathwaite, Olga
Calderon, Katelin Corbett, Amy DeFelice, Gene Fellner, Helen Kwah,
Manny Lopez, Anna Malyukova, Kate E. O'Hara, Malgorzata
Powietrzynska, Isabel Sellas, Kenneth Tobin, and Yau Yan Wong.
This book explores how mindfulness has been infused into education
to produce favorable outcomes, such as stress reduction, heightened
focus, resilience, calmness, alertness, mood regulation,
self-awareness, professional commitment, and increased compassion
and kindness to self and others. The chapters are situated in
diverse contexts, including schools and colleges, warfare, violent
extremism, global warming, child sex abuse, and species extinction.
A feature of the book is the use of what is learned from ongoing
research to design interventions to increase the incidence of
mindful practices, to enhance learning and forms of conduct to
transform social life and sustain harmonious lifestyles. Inclusion
of mindfulness-based interventions in teacher education programs
include breathing meditation and tools such as heuristics and
mindful writing. Breathing meditation and its relationship to
mindfulness is addressed, including abdominal breathing as a
component of meditation, leading to mindful conduct and
physiological changes, including heart rate and blood oxygenation
levels. The extent to which breathing practice includes nasal and
oral inhalation and exhalation is also considered in relation to
increasing levels of nitric oxide in the airways, thereby enhancing
social communication and wellness. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Learning: Research and Practice.
13 Questions: Reframing Education's Conversation: Science examines
thirteen critical questions confronting contemporary science
education and a dynamic and evolving universe threatened by issues
of sustainability and disharmony. The world's leading scholars in
science education utilize cutting-edge theories and analyses to
illuminate possible pathways in a world threatened by global
warming, mass extinctions, and pervasive conflicts. These
provocative responses to some of the most difficult questions
facing science education to date are intended to provoke, expand,
and enlighten readers about possibilities for transforming and
enhancing the social and physical worlds we inhabit and for which
we are stewards. The sections of 13 Questions address science
curriculum; power and science education; quality of science
teachers; quality of science students; quality of science teacher
education; equity; language; religion; race; families; culture of
science and science education; political issues and science
education; and bold visions for science education. The book is
international in scope and shows value for difference in the
perspectives, values, and theoretical underpinnings of authors.
13 Questions: Reframing Education's Conversation: Science examines
thirteen critical questions confronting contemporary science
education and a dynamic and evolving universe threatened by issues
of sustainability and disharmony. The world's leading scholars in
science education utilize cutting-edge theories and analyses to
illuminate possible pathways in a world threatened by global
warming, mass extinctions, and pervasive conflicts. These
provocative responses to some of the most difficult questions
facing science education to date are intended to provoke, expand,
and enlighten readers about possibilities for transforming and
enhancing the social and physical worlds we inhabit and for which
we are stewards. The sections of 13 Questions address science
curriculum; power and science education; quality of science
teachers; quality of science students; quality of science teacher
education; equity; language; religion; race; families; culture of
science and science education; political issues and science
education; and bold visions for science education. The book is
international in scope and shows value for difference in the
perspectives, values, and theoretical underpinnings of authors.
This book explores how mindfulness has been infused into education
to produce favorable outcomes, such as stress reduction, heightened
focus, resilience, calmness, alertness, mood regulation,
self-awareness, professional commitment, and increased compassion
and kindness to self and others. The chapters are situated in
diverse contexts, including schools and colleges, warfare, violent
extremism, global warming, child sex abuse, and species extinction.
A feature of the book is the use of what is learned from ongoing
research to design interventions to increase the incidence of
mindful practices, to enhance learning and forms of conduct to
transform social life and sustain harmonious lifestyles. Inclusion
of mindfulness-based interventions in teacher education programs
include breathing meditation and tools such as heuristics and
mindful writing. Breathing meditation and its relationship to
mindfulness is addressed, including abdominal breathing as a
component of meditation, leading to mindful conduct and
physiological changes, including heart rate and blood oxygenation
levels. The extent to which breathing practice includes nasal and
oral inhalation and exhalation is also considered in relation to
increasing levels of nitric oxide in the airways, thereby enhancing
social communication and wellness. This book was originally
published as a special issue of Learning: Research and Practice.
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Teaching and Learning Science (Paperback)
Kenneth Tobin; Contributions by William J. Boone, Lisa A. Donnelly, David F. Treagust, Richard H. Kozoll, …
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R2,140
Discovery Miles 21 400
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Ships in 18 - 22 working days
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Teaching and Learning Science consists of sixty-six chapters
written by more than ninety leading educators and scientists. The
contributions are informed by cutting-edge theory and research and
address numerous issues that are central to K 12 education. This
resource will be particularly valuable for parents and teachers as
schools around the country prepare students to meet the challenges
presented when science is added to the No Child Left Behind Act in
2007. These insightful contributions touch on many of the most
controversial topics facing science educators and students today,
including evolution, testing, homeschooling, ecology, and the
achievement gaps faced by girls, children of color, and ESL
learners. Accessible and full of insight, the set is written for
teachers, parents, and students, and offers a wealth of resources
germane to K-12 settings. The book is arranged according to themes
that are central to science education: language and scientific
literacy, home and school relationships, equity, new roles for
teachers and students, connecting science to other areas of the
curriculum, resources for teachers and learners, and science in the
news. The authors address controversial topics such as evolution,
and present alternative ways to think about teaching, learning, the
outcomes of science education, and issues associated with high
stakes testing. In addition, relationships between science and
literacy are explored in terms of art and science, making sense of
visuals in textbooks, reading, writing, children's literature, and
uses of comics to represent science. Chapters also address how to
teach contemporary science, including the origin of the chemical
elements, the big bang, hurricanes, tornadoes, volcanoes, and
tsunamis.
Coteaching and cogenerative dialoguing are ways of learning to
teach that truly bridge the gap between theory and praxis, as new
teachers learn to teach alongside peers and more experienced
teachers. These practices are also means of overcoming teacher
isolation and burnout. Through cogenerative dialogue sessions, new
and experienced teachers, university supervisors, researchers, and
administrators are able to create local theory for the purpose of
improving teaching and learning. In this book, contributors from
four countries report on how coteaching and cogenerative dialoguing
worked in their situation.
Many would argue that the state of urban science education has been
static for the past several decades and that there is little to
learn from it. Rather than accepting this deficit perspective,
Improving Urban Science Education strives to recognize and
understand the successes that exist there by systematically
documenting seven years of research into issues salient to teaching
and learning in urban high school science classes. Grounded in the
post structuralism of William Sewell_and brought to life through
the experiences of different students, teachers, and school
settings in Philadelphia_this book shows how teachers and students
can work together to enact meaningful science education when social
and cultural differences as well as inappropriate curricula often
make the challenges seem insurmountable. Chapters contain rich
images of urban youth and each strives to offer insights into
problems and suggestions for resolving them. Most significant, in
spite of the challenges, the research offers hope and shows that
fresh approaches to teaching and learning can lead students_some
who have already been pronounced academic, even societal,
failures_to becoming avid and deep learners of science.
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