E-Book, Englisch, Band 442, 550 Seiten, Web PDF
Reihe: Counterpoints
Bryan / Tobin 13 Questions
1. Auflage 2018
ISBN: 978-1-4331-4495-0
Verlag: Peter Lang
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Reframing Education's Conversation: Science
E-Book, Englisch, Band 442, 550 Seiten, Web PDF
Reihe: Counterpoints
ISBN: 978-1-4331-4495-0
Verlag: Peter Lang
Format: PDF
Kopierschutz: Adobe DRM (»Systemvoraussetzungen)
Autoren/Hrsg.
Fachgebiete
- Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Lehrerausbildung, Unterricht & Didaktik Methoden des Lehrens und Lernens
- Interdisziplinäres Wissenschaften Wissenschaften: Allgemeines
- Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Lehrerausbildung, Unterricht & Didaktik Allgemeine Didaktik
- Sozialwissenschaften Pädagogik Pädagogik Bildungssystem Bildungspolitik, Bildungsreform
Weitere Infos & Material
Shirley R. Steinberg: Foreword: We Must Kill Our Darlings – Lynn A. Bryan/Kenneth Tobin: Of Eggs, Chickens, and Deep-Seated Ideologies – Section One: The Science Curriculum: What Are the Basics and Are We Teaching Them? – Christina Siry: The Science Curriculum at the Elementary Level: What Are the Basics and Are We Teaching Them? – Femi S. Otulaja/Meshach B. Ogunniyi: The Science Curriculum: What Are the Basics and Are We Teaching Them? – Anna Stetsenko: Science Education and Transformative Activist Stance: Activism as a Quest for Becoming via Authentic-Authorial Contribution to Communal Practices – Section Two: Power and Science Education: Who Decides the Forms Science Education Has Taken and Who Should Decide? – Sara Tolbert/Angela Calabrese Barton/Luis C. Moll: What Can Teachers Do to Restructure Power Dynamics in Science Classrooms? Exploring the Personal and Social Transformative Power of Science Learning through a Funds of Knowledge Approach – Larry Bencze/Michael J. Reiss/Ajay Sharma/Matthew Weinstein: STEM Education as “Trojan Horse”: Deconstructed and Reinvented for All – Section Three: Science Teachers Under Suspicion: Is It True That Science Teachers Aren’t as Good as They Used to Be? – Shakhnoza Kayumova/Deborah J. Tippins: Obsessed with Accountability? Science Teachers Under the Microscope – Giuliano Reis: En Route to Becoming a “Good” Teacher: An Attempted Hijack of Pedagogical Autonomy? – Section Four: Science Students Under Suspicion: Is It True That Students Are Less Interested in Science Than They Used to Be and Perform More Poorly in Science Than They Used to? – Tang Wee Teo: Problematizing “Problematic” Students in Lower Track Classes – Sonya N. Martin: Confronting Prevailing Narratives of Student Engagement and Participation in Science Classrooms – Section Five: Science Teacher Education: What Is Good Science Teaching and How Do We Teach People to Be Good Science Teachers? – Maurício Pietrocola: Professional Duties and Challenges of Novice Teachers: Level of Consciousness in Facing the Pedagogical Risk – Aik-Ling Tan: Science Teacher Professional Development: The Blind Men and the Elephant – Section Six: (In)Equity and Science Education: In What Ways Does (In)equity Affect the Process of Science Education? – Flavia Rezende/Fernanda Ostermann: Science Education and Social Inequality: Reproduction or Confrontation? – Maria Varelas: Dialectical Relationships and How They Shape (In)Equitable Science Learning Spaces and Places – Maxine McKinney de Royston/Abiola A. Farinde: Race and Poverty in Science Education: Questions and Tensions for the Field – Ana M. Becerra: Dismantling Racism as a Strategy for Academic Success – Castano Rodriguez/Laura Barraza: In What Ways Does Race Affect the Educational Process? Challenging the Homogenization of Academia – Kathryn Scantlebury: “Where Is the …?”: Using Intersectionality to Problematize Power and Hierarchy in Science Teaching and Learning – Section Seven: Language and Science Education: In What Ways Does Language Affect the Process of Science Education? – Sara E. D. Wilmes/Christina Siry/Roberto Gómez Fernández/Anna Maria Gorges: Reconstructing Science Education within the Language | Science Relationship: Reflections from Multilingual Contexts – Purita P. Bilbao/Deborah J. Tippins/Sophia (Sun Kyung) Jeong: The Tension of Maintaining Language Diversity versus Extinction: Mother Tongue as a Filipino Response – Cory Buxton/Lourdes Cardozo-Gaibisso/Yu Xia/Jiong Li: How Perspectives from Linguistically Diverse Classrooms Can Help All Students Unlock the Language of Science – Section Eight: Religion and Science Education: In What Ways Does Religion Affect the Process of Science Education? – Michael J. Reiss: Why a Chapter on Religion in a Book on Science Education? – Nidhal Guessoum: Religion in Science Classes: Heresy or Constructive Pedagogy? – Section Nine: Families and Science Education: What Is the Role of Families in the Process of Science Education? – Martha Allexsaht-Snider: Exploring Families’ Roles in Science Learning: From El Bosque in Veracruz, México to the Southeastern U.S. – Leanne M. Avery: From Opening Portals to Creating New Pathways – Section Ten: Culture of Science and Science Education: In What Way Does the Culture of Science and Images of Science Affect the Process of Science Education? – Anita Hussénius: Forming Bonds—Breaking Bonds – Cassie F. Quigley and S. Megan Che: On the Need to Engage in Constructive, Productive, Scientific Discourses on Highly Controversial and Emotionally Charged Topics – Section Eleven: Science Education Reform: What Have Been the Goals and the Effects of the Attempts to Improve Science Education Over the Last Decade? – Rowhea Elmesky: Science Education Reform: Can Students Learn Science While Navigating Oppressive Schools within an Oppressive Society? – Lucy Avraamidou/Lynn A. Bryan: Science Education Reform: Reflecting on the Past and Raising Questions for the Future – Section Twelve: Science Education as a Political Issue: What’s Missing in the Public Conversation About Science Education? – David E. Long: Rethinking Science Education in Light of Motivated Reasoning – Lyn Carter/Carolina Castano Rodriguez/Mellita Jones: Sociopolitical Activism and Transformative Learning: Expanding the Discourse About What Counts in Science Education – Section Thirteen: Science Education Visions: What Is School Science for and What Should We Be Doing in the Name of Science Education? – Elisabeth (Lily) Taylor/Peter Charles Taylor: Breaking Down Enlightenment Silos: From STEM to ST2EAM Education, and Beyond – Lee Beavington/Heesoon Bai: Science Education in the Key of Gentle Empiricism – Isabel Martínez-Cuenca/Autumn Joy Florêncio-Wain/Alandeom W. Oliveira: When Holism Meets Democratization: Re-centering Science Classrooms to Support Students’ Feelings of Agency and Connectedness – Contributor Biographies – Subject Index – Names Index.