6. Dangerous Science and the Limits of Free Inquiry

2021 ◽  
pp. 161-184
Keyword(s):  
EDUDEENA ◽  
2017 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
Author(s):  
Agus Miftakus Surur

Researchers chose a modified free inquiry model to help improve students’ fluency and elaboration. The purpose of this research is to know the application of modified free inquiry which can improve the student’s fluency and elaboration of students’ thinking on trigonometric material. Research method in this research is qualitative research method and research type is research of class action. The data in this study were obtained from the results of validation, test results, observation of teacher and student activity, and interview result, then apply data triangulation and theory to check the validity of data. The results showed an increase in fluency and elaboration in students. This means that a modified free inquiry model can help improve students’ fluency and elaboration in trigonometric learning. The results are supported by the observation of teacher and student activity that is in accordance with the lesson plan and also the result of the interview which get positive response from the students.Keywords: modified free inquiry, fluency and elaboration, mathematics


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (2) ◽  
pp. 1-27
Author(s):  
Ashley Floyd Kuntz

Abstract Student protests have developed on campuses throughout the country in response to controversial speakers. Overwhelmingly, these protests have been framed as conflicts over the right to free speech and the importance of free inquiry on college campuses. This essay reframes conflicts like these as moral disagreements over the role of individuals and institutions in producing and disseminating knowledge that supports or undermines justice within a pluralistic, democratic society. Using the specific case of Charles Murray’s visit to Middlebury College in spring 2017 and drawing insight from social moral epistemology, the essay aims to clarify the moral concerns at stake in clashes over controversial speakers and to identify possibilities to advance the moral aims of institutions of higher education in response to such events.


Author(s):  
S.C. Williams

Ministerial training throughout the nineteenth century was dogged by persistent uncertainties about what Dissenters wanted ministers to do: were they to be preachers or scholars, settled pastors or roving missionaries? Sects and denominations such as the Baptists and Congregationalists invested heavily in the professionalization of ministry, founding, building, and expanding ministerial training colleges whose pompous architecture often expressed their cultural ambitions. That was especially true for the Methodists who had often been wary of a learned ministry, while Presbyterians who had always nursed such a status built an impressive international network of colleges, centred on Princeton Seminary. Among both Methodists and Presbyterians, such institution building could be both bedevilled and eventually stimulated by secessions. Colleges were heavily implicated not just in the supply of domestic ministers but also in foreign mission. Even exceptions to this pattern such as the Quakers who claimed not to have dedicated ministers were tacitly professionalizing training by the end of the century. However, the investment in institutions did not prevent protracted disputes over how academic their training should be. Many very successful Dissenting entrepreneurs, such as Charles Haddon Spurgeon, Thomas Champness, William Booth, and Adoniram Judson Gordon, offered unpretentious vocational training, while in colonies such as Australia there were complaints from Congregationalists and others that the colleges were too high-flying for their requirements. The need to offer a liberal education, which came to include science, as well as systematic theological instruction put strain on the resources of the colleges, a strain that many resolved by farming out the former to secular universities. Many of the controversies generated by theological change among Dissenters centred on colleges because they were disputes about the teaching of biblical criticism and how to resolve the tension between free inquiry and the responsibilities of tutors and students to the wider denomination. Colleges were ill-equipped to accommodate theological change because their heads insisted that theology was a static discipline, central to which was the simple exegesis of Scripture. That generated tensions with their students and caused numerous teachers to be edged out of colleges for heresy, most notoriously Samuel Davidson from Lancashire Independent College and William Robertson Smith from the Aberdeen Free Church College. Nevertheless, even conservatives such as Moses Stuart at Andover had emphasized the importance of keeping one’s exegetical tools up to date, and it became progressively easier in most denominations for college teachers to enjoy intellectual liberty, much as Unitarians had always done. Yet the victory of free inquiry was never complete and pyrrhic in any event as from the end of the century the colleges could not arrest a slow decline in the morale and prospects of Dissenting ministers.


NanoEthics ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 14 (3) ◽  
pp. 271-283
Author(s):  
Christopher Nathan ◽  
Stuart Coles

AbstractIt has become a standard for researchers carrying out biotechnology projects to do a life cycle assessment (LCA). This is a process for assessing the environmental impact of a technology, product or policy. Doing so is no simple matter, and in the last decades, a rich set of methodologies has developed around LCA. However, the proper methods and meanings of the process remain contested. Preceding the development of the international standard that now governs LCA, there was a lively debate in the academic community about the inclusion of ‘values’ within the process. We revisit this debate and reconsider the way forward for LCA. We set out ways in which those outside of science can provide input into LCAs by informing the value assumptions at stake. At the same time, we will emphasize that the role of those within the scientific community need not (and sometimes, will inevitably not) involve value-free inquiry. We carry out this exploration through a case study of a particular technology project that sought ways to produce industrial and consumer products from algal oils.


2019 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 9-18
Author(s):  
Hartono Bancong ◽  
Ana Dhiqfaini Sultan ◽  
Subaer Subaer ◽  
Muris Muris

The purpose of this study was to develop teaching aids of blackbody radiation experiment and practicum devices based on modified free inquiry which are valid and reliable. This teaching aids was designed to demonstrate the relationship between the intensity of radiation and the absolute temperature of a blackbody (the law of Stefan-Boltzmann). The principle of this experiments is the amount of current will flow from the voltage source and enter to the black box. The black box will absorb and emit radiation. There is a nichrome wire inside the black box that will be light up, heat and emit radiation when electrically flowed. The emitted heat will be measured by temperature sensors using thermocouple located outside the black box. Based on experts and practitioner evaluation, the developed teaching aids of blackbody radiation experiment and practicum devices based on modified free inquiry were found to be valid, and reliable. The results of the experiment showed that the intensity of blackbody radiation was directly proportional to its temperature. This result is consistent with the law of Stefan-Boltzmann. Furthermore, the average of students’ perception of the developed teaching aids and practicum devices of blackbody radiation are 74.92% (good) and 80.17% (very good) respectively. This indicates that the teaching aids and practicum devices that have been developed can be used to demonstrate and prove the modern physics concepts related to blackbody radiation.Keywords: Teaching Aids, Stefan-Boltzmann’s law, Blackbody RadiationPenelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengembangan alat peraga eksperimen radiasi benda hitam dan perangkat praktikum fisika berbasis modified free inquiry yang valid dan reliabel. Alat peraga tersebut dirancang untuk mendemonstrasikan hubungan antara intensitas radiasi benda hitam dengan suhu mutlak yang dipancarkannya (Hukum Stefan-Boltzmann). Prinsip kerja dari alat peraga tersebut adalah arus akan mengalir dari sumber tegangan dan masuk ke dalam kotak lubang hitam. Kotak ini berfungsi untuk menyerap dan memancarkan radiasi. Di dalam kotak terdapat kawat nicrom yang akan menyala  dan memancarkan radiasi ketika dialiri arus listrik. Panas yang dipancarkan akan diukur oleh termokopel radiasi yang berada di luar kotak. Berdasarkan penilaian validator, alat peraga eksperimen radiasi benda hitam dan perangkat praktikum fisika berbasis modified free inquiry yang telah dikembangkan dinyatakan valid dan reliabel. Hasil uji coba menunjukkan bahwa intensitas radiasi yang dipancarkan oleh benda hitam berbanding lurus dengan temperaturnya yang sesuai dengan hukum Stefan-Boltzmann. Selanjutnya, rata-rata persepsi praktikan terhadap alat peraga eksperimen radiasi benda hitam dan perangkat praktikum yang telah dikembangkan secara berturut-turut adalah 74,92% (baik) dan 80,17% (sangat baik). Hal ini mengindikasikan bahwa alat peraga dan perangkat praktikum yang telah dikembangkan dapat digunakan untuk mendemonstrasikan dan membuktikan konsep-konsep fisika modern yang berhubungan dengan radiasi benda hitam.Kata kunci: Alat Peraga, Hukum Stefan-Boltzmann, Radiasi Benda Hitam


2017 ◽  
Author(s):  
Insar Damopolii

The purpose of this research was to know effect of inquiry learning strategies and problem solving ability to student university science process skills on plant physiology prakticum. The research applied the quasy experiment method with a 2 x 2 factorial design. The results showed that (1) science process skills of student university who learned with modified free inquiry learning strategies are higher science process skills of student university who learned with guided inquiry learning strategies (2) There is interaction effect between strategies learning and problem solving ability to the science process skills. (3) science process skills of student university who learned with modified free inquiry learning strategies is higher than the students who learned with guided inquiry learning strategies in terms of high problem solving ability. and (4) science process skills student university learned with guided inquiry learning strategies are higher than students who learned with modified free inquiry learning strategies in terms of low problem solving ability. Based on the findings of that inquiry learning strategies effect science process skills of student university.


2018 ◽  
Vol 10 (01) ◽  
pp. 1
Author(s):  
Mila H. Catria Marta ◽  
Ondi Suganda ◽  
Rahma Widiantie

Keterampilan proses sains berpotensi membangun kompetensi dasar hidup siswa dalam bersikap ilmiah dan proses konstruksi pengetahuan secara bertahap. Siswa cenderung kurang terampil dalam mengamati, merumuskan masalah, membuat hipotesis, merancang percobaan, melakukan percobaan, hingga membuat kesimpulan dalam mengkaji fenomena sains yang telah difasilitasi dalam pembelajaran. Penelitian ini bertujuan untuk menganalisis penerapan metode praktikum berbasis Modified Free Inquiry (MFI) dalam meningkatkan keterampilan proses sains siswa pada konsep Animalia di Kelas X MIPA SMA Negeri di Kuningan. Jenis penelitian yang digunakan adalah dengan desain nonequivalent control group design. Subjek dalam penelitian ini adalah siswa kelas X MIPA 1 sebagai kelas eksperimen dan kelas X MIPA 4 sebagai kelas kontrol. Pengumpulan data dilakukan dengan menggunakan instrumen soal tes, asesmen kinerja dan lembar observasi. Hasil penelitian pada postest menunjukkan bahwa nilai signifikasi antara kelompok eksperimen dengan kelompok kontrol berdasarkan uji kesamaan rata-rata (Mann Whitney) yaitu 0,277 dengan taraf signifikasi 0,277 ≥ 0,05 . Hal tersebut menyimpulkan tidak terdapat perbedaan peningkatan keterampilan proses sains antara kelas eksperimen dan kelas kontrol. Hal serupa dengan perhitungan uji n-gain yang memiliki nilai 0,284 dengan taraf signifikasi 0,284 ≥ 0,05 yang menunjukkan bahwa peningkatan keterampilan proses sains di kelas eksperimen dan kelas kontrol tidak jauh beda. Hal tersebut dapat disimpulkan bahwa tidak terdapat perbedaan metode praktikum yang berbasis Modified Free Inquiry maupun metode praktikum yang berbasis Group Investigation dalam meningkatkan keterampilan proses sains pada pembelajaran Biologi, materi Animalia. Guru dapat menggunakan model pembelajaran Modified Free Inquiry maupun Group investigation dalam praktikum untuk meningkatkan keterampilan proses sains siswa.Kata kunci : keterampilan proses sains, metode praktikum, model Modified Free Inquiry


2020 ◽  
Vol 25 (2) ◽  
pp. 134-153 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nicolas Tanchuk ◽  
Marc Kruse ◽  
Kevin McDonough

In Canada, several universities have recently implemented course requirements in Indigenous studies as a condition of graduation, while others are considering following suit. Policies making Indigenous course requirements (hereafter ICRs) compulsory have caused considerable controversy. According to proponents, a main purpose of ICRs is to address historical wrongs and to foster a more complete understanding of the ongoing relationship between Indigenous and non-Indigenous citizens. According to critics, making such courses compulsory effectively imposes illiberal restrictions on university students and faculty by limiting the epistemic aim of free inquiry, while wrongly prioritizing concern for the welfare of one social group over others. In this essay, we propose a liberal-democratic justification for ICRs that addresses these two worries about the ideals that may underwrite these courses. We argue that ICRs can be justified in liberal democratic terms insofar as they foster knowledge of what John Rawls refers to as ‘the constitutional essentials’ and remediate civic forms of what Miranda Fricker refers to as ‘epistemic injustices’. Universities, we claim have highly plausible role responsibilities to promote the civic epistemic aims identified by Rawls and Fricker, which are especially weighty due to the power university degrees confer, as part of the formation of a “democratic elite”. We then defend this line of argument against objections on the basis of academic freedom, by arguing that universities have reasons, internal to the search for truth to champion the political aims we identify.


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