Science and technology links in Israeli secondary schools - do we have a reason to celebrate?

Author(s):  
Uche Emma Nwachukwu

Science and technology (S&T) education is crucial to the achievement of socio-economic development of any society and also a critical element in the attainment of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Standard laboratories and equipments as well as reagents are S&T infrastructures essential for providing qualitative education for producing national technological manpower. This study evaluates the condition of S&T infrastructures in the Nigerian secondary schools. The study utilises primary data collected from public and private secondary schools across the six geo-political zones in the country. Findings show that there are inadequate teachers, laboratories and necessary equipment for teaching S&T related subjects in most of the secondary schools in Nigeria. Also, electricity supply from the national grid to secondary schools is poor because only 30% of them have light at most 4hours a day. The study therefore recommends the provision of adequate funds and electricity generators for these institutions to enhance the teaching and overall development of S&T education in Nigeria. In addition, adequate and qualified personnel (teachers and laboratory technicians) should be provided while good maintenance culture and improved security of laboratories and equipment in secondary schools should be imbibed by all secondary schools in the country.


2018 ◽  
Vol 8 (3) ◽  
pp. 18
Author(s):  
Inas Aref Saleh Naser

This study aimed at finding out the degree of including international standards of science education in the physicssyllabus of the secondary stage in Palestinian schools. The sample of the study consisted of the analytical aspect ofthe physics textbooks of the eleventh and twelfth grades. The findings of the study show that the rates of includinginternational standards of science education in these textbooks do not match expectations. The study also shows thatthe criterion of physics ranked first on the study scale among the criteria of content, followed by the criterion ofscience as a survey, and then the criterion of unified concepts and processes of science. However, there is obviousomission of the standards of science and technology, science from personal and societal perspectives, and the historyand nature of science. In light of these results, the researcher recommends the development of the physics syllabus ofthe secondary stage to include international standards. The study, further, calls for more research on the assessmentof physics textbooks and other disciples of science at different educational levels in view of content standards as wellason the impact of including such standards on the learning outputs.


1962 ◽  
Vol 14 ◽  
pp. 441-444 ◽  
Author(s):  
J. E. Geake ◽  
H. Lipson ◽  
M. D. Lumb

Work has recently begun in the Physics Department of the Manchester College of Science and Technology on an attempt to simulate lunar luminescence in the laboratory. This programme is running parallel with that of our colleagues in the Manchester University Astronomy Department, who are making observations of the luminescent spectrum of the Moon itself. Our instruments are as yet only partly completed, but we will describe briefly what they are to consist of, in the hope that we may benefit from the comments of others in the same field, and arrange to co-ordinate our work with theirs.


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