Understanding the Small Group Modeling Process by Using the Perspective of Collective Intelligence in the Context of After-school Science Class on Climate Change

Author(s):  
Yoon-hee Ha ◽  
Je-yeon Gwak ◽  
Ji-yeon Kwon ◽  
Jong-uk Kim ◽  
Seung-urn Choe ◽  
...  
2020 ◽  
Vol 12 (16) ◽  
pp. 6400 ◽  
Author(s):  
Carlie D. Trott ◽  
Andrea E. Weinberg

Scientists and sustainability scholars continue to make urgent calls for rapid societal transformation to sustainability. Science education is a key venue for this transformation. In this manuscript, we argue that by positioning children as critical actors for sustainability in science education contexts, they may begin to reimagine what science means to them and to society. This multi-site, mixed-methods study examined how children’s climate change learning and action influenced their science engagement along cognitive, affective, and behavioral dimensions. For fifteen weeks, ten- to twelve-year-olds participated in an after-school program that combined on-site interactive educational activities (e.g., greenhouse gas tag) with off-site digital photography (i.e., photovoice process), and culminated in youth-led climate action in family and community settings. Participants were 55 children (M = 11.1 years), the majority from groups underrepresented in science (52.7% girls; 43.6% youth of color; 61.8% low-income). Combined survey and focus group analyses showed that, after the program, science became more relevant to children’s lives, and their attitudes towards science (i.e., in school, careers, and in society) improved significantly. Children explained that understanding the scientific and social dimensions of climate change expanded their views of science: Who does it, how, and why—that it is more than scientists inside laboratories. Perhaps most notably, the urgency of climate change solutions made science more interesting and important to children, and many reported greater confidence, participation, and achievement in school science. The vast majority of the children (88.5%) reported that the program helped them to like science more, and following the program, more than half (52.7%) aspired to a STEM career. Lastly, more than a third (37%) reported improved grades in school science, which many attributed to their program participation. Towards strengthening children’s science engagement, the importance of climate change learning and action—particularly place-based, participatory, and action-focused pedagogies—are discussed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 360-378 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jan Oakley

Abstract This paper highlights the voices and experiences of individuals who objected to animal dissection in their high school science and biology classes. The data were collected via online surveys (n = 311), and 8 of these participants took part in more in-depth telephone interviews. Participants were former students from Ontario, Canada, who discussed their experiences with animal dissection in general, and objection to dissection in particular, if applicable. The findings reveal that students who expressed objection to dissection experienced a range of teacher responses, including pressure to participate, the request to join another group of students and watch, the choice to use a dissection alternative, warnings of compromised grades, and other responses. The study points to the importance of choice policies to ensure that dissection alternatives are available in classrooms. In this way, students can select among different options of how they would like to learn, and teachers can be prepared to accommodate those who choose not to dissect.


2015 ◽  
Vol 43 (3) ◽  
pp. 289-301
Author(s):  
김현애 ◽  
KIM HEUI BAIK ◽  
Kang, Eunhee

2003 ◽  
Vol 2 (1) ◽  
pp. 138-143 ◽  
Author(s):  
Douglas L. Ratay ◽  
Ashley Schairer ◽  
Catherine A. Garland ◽  
Cynthia Gomez-Martin

Author(s):  
Allan Feldman ◽  
Molly Nation ◽  
Glenn Gordon Smith ◽  
Metin Besalti

This chapter reports on a four-year study to change how climate change science is taught and learned in schools. The goal of the Climate Change Narrative Game Education (CHANGE) project is to take what is known about reform-based practices, incorporating students' lived experiences into the curriculum, and the integration of Information and Communications Technology (ICT) into the classroom. CHANGE uses the following: scientifically realistic text narratives (text stories with local characters, 50-100 years in the future, a local, place-based approach, a focus on the built environment, the use of simulations and games based on scientific data, and a web-based “intermedia” eBook narrative where sections of narrative text alternate with simulations and computer games. The chapter reports on the ways that we have used the above principles to connect classrooms and communities and school science with academic science to facilitate student inquiry into climate science by combining virtual serious educational games with in class, hands-on inquiry using scientific models.


Author(s):  
Mirko Pečarič

Different realities are possible and thus also different decisions. They are based on predispositions faced with different challenges that people (do not) acknowledge. The research objective is to point at differences when the reality is based on the opinions of experts, public delivery deliberation, a small group of experts or committees, an individual who decides based on diverse inputs, a small group of experts that does the same, or on collective wisdom. This paper presents a way of independent managing of various perspectives that nevertheless can exhibit their symbiosis in collective opinions as one form of (collective) reality, here named as a “visa” approach of decision making. This paper, based on presented differences, systemic regulatory elements, and their challenges, presents them as synergies (structural coupling) in the form of collective decision making. Independent and individual participation based on collective intelligence can diminish the pressure of interest groups, lobbying, or other informal influences, and can better align various interests.


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