Socio-Cultural Perspectives on Science Education: An International Dialogue

Springer Verlag (1998)
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Abstract

Tackles the question of whose interests are being served by the current science education practices and policies, and offers perspectives from culture, economics, epistemology, equity, gender, language, and religion. Promotes a reflective science education that takes place within people's cultural lives rather than taking it over. Among the topics are situating school science in a climate of critical cultural reform, the influence of language on teaching and learning science in a second language, a cultural history of science education in Japan, and the philosophy of science and radical intellectual Islam in Turkey. Of interest to students, researchers, and practitioners of education. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR.

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Citations of this work

Science Education from a Social Constructivist Position: A Worldview.Garth D. Benson - 2001 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 20 (5):443-452.
Conceptualizations of Nature From Science Students in Northeastern Colombia.William Medina-Jerez - 2007 - Bulletin of Science, Technology and Society 27 (5):377-385.

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