Scientific and Religious Perspectives on Evolution in the Curriculum: an Approach Based on Pedagogy of Difference

被引:0
作者
David C. Owens
Rachel S. A. Pear
Hanan A. Alexander
Michael J. Reiss
Tali Tal
机构
[1] Georgia Southern University,Department of Middle Grades and Secondary Education, Armstrong Campus
[2] University of Haifa,Center for Jewish Education in the Faculty of Education
[3] University of Haifa,Faculty of Education
[4] UCL Institute of Education,Faculty of Education in Technology and Science
[5] Technion-Israel Institute of Technology,undefined
来源
Research in Science Education | 2018年 / 48卷
关键词
Epistemic insight; Religion; Evolution; Creation; Pedagogy of difference;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
There is a long history of some students finding that the science instruction they receive in schools fails to address their deeply held concerns about the theory of evolution. Such concerns are principally religious, though there are also students with deeply held religious views who are perfectly comfortable with the theory of evolution. New instructional strategies are emerging, aimed at reducing the tensions that may exist between evolution and religion by making space for students to examine their own views and recognize the spectrum of views that exists between atheistic evolution and special creation, as well as the bounded nature of science and different ways of knowing. In this article, we discuss the teaching of evolution in societies where acceptance of the theory of evolution is far from universal, and argue that an approach based on pedagogy of difference has considerable potential to enhance students’ development of epistemic insight through recognition of the multiple perspectives that exist concerning the relationship between religion and science. In doing so, we explicate precisely what pedagogy of difference entails and introduce an approach that should enhance evolution education, and even aid students’ situating of science as a resource for making decisions about issues with scientific and societal aspects where the acknowledgement of multiple perspectives is valuable.
引用
收藏
页码:1171 / 1186
页数:15
相关论文
共 36 条
[1]  
Aikenhead GS(1996)Science education: border crossing into the subculture of science Studies in Science Education 27 1-52
[2]  
Alexander HA(2017)Public theology and liberal education International Journal of Public Theology 11 313-327
[3]  
Asghar A(2007)Canadian pre-service elementary teachers’ conceptions of biological evolution and evolution education McGill Journal of Education 42 189-209
[4]  
Wiles JR(2013)Secondary school students’ epistemic insight into the relationships between science and religion—a preliminary enquiry Research in Science Education 43 1715-1732
[5]  
Alters B(2000)The nature of science and the role of knowledge and belief Science & Education 9 219-246
[6]  
Billingsley B(1985)Science education and the philosophy of science: twenty-five years of mutually exclusive development School Science and Mathematics 85 541-555
[7]  
Taber K(2016)Lack of evolution acceptance inhibits students’ negotiation of biology-based socioscientific issues Journal of Biological Education 50 407-424
[8]  
Riga F(1995)Hearts and minds in the science classroom: the education of a confirmed evolutionist Journal of Research in Science Teaching 32 585-611
[9]  
Newdick H(2016)Using our heads and HARTSS*: developing perspective-taking skills for socioscientific reasoning (* humanities, ARTs, and social sciences) Journal of Science Teacher Education 27 261-281
[10]  
Cobern WW(2006)Why is public science education important? Journal of Translational Medicine 4 7-280