CHAPTER 3. The Production of Scientific Knowledge and Social Practices: the International Response

2020 ◽  
Vol 5 (10) ◽  
pp. 1235-1242
Author(s):  
Abdelkader Sbai ◽  
Abdeljabbar El Mediouni ◽  
Hassan Hakim ◽  
Said Mentak

The conceptions of the baccalaureate students of Bouarfa and Jerada are analyzed on the basis of a questionnaire relating to the environment and sustainable development. These conceptions are analyzed as interactions between scientific knowledge (K), social practices (P), and value systems (V). The multivariate analyzes used highlight two major poles or systems of conceptions. The first pole brings together people with rather anthropocentric tendencies concerned first with the use of natural resources. The second pole brings together people who tend to be more ecocentric and concerned about preserving the environment. Within these clusters appear sub-groups with different characteristics: for or against GMOs, preservation of the environment, activism in favor of the environment, actions of defense or protection of the environment. Most of the students interviewed lent feelings towards animals, but with a difference from one animal to another and from one city to another (sentiment-centered attitude). These different conceptions deserve to be taken into account in the training of trainers and teaching programs to better assume the objectives of Environmental Education.


Author(s):  
Matthias Betz ◽  
Volker Wulf

Grounded design is a particular design-research approach applied in case studies. The approach aims to investigate social practices with the purpose of identifying and unveiling problematic aspects of that practice. In research contexts, design case studies are conducted by applying established research methods such as ethnographic field studies, participatory design, and action research. As a research approach, grounded design claims to contribute to scientific knowledge by creating a collection of documented cases that is accessible for a further comprehensive and overarching analysis. This chapter provides an example of such a study through a comparison of two design case studies in the field of civil security research, in the context of firefighting: the Landmarke project and the Koordinator project. In addition, this chapter addresses the transferability of design case studies.


2019 ◽  
Vol 41 (2) ◽  
pp. 24-28
Author(s):  
Mariko Yoshida

Abstract Drawing upon empirical observations, daily experiences of sea-level rise, and the role of religious beliefs that form decision making among migrant families, I examine the ways in which the local individuals and communities in Tuvalu have dealt with a virtual and fluctuating scenario for which they did not use scientific knowledge to control their environment. Instead, they reacted negatively to future anxiety constructed as a predicted scenario while continuing to contend with the immediate demands of community. I demonstrate the social practices that incorporate the intangible sea-level rise, as calculated through scientific measures, into tangible and substantive material for evaluating changes.


Author(s):  
Pierre Clément

Three concepts that structure my research in Didactics of Biology can also express convergence with the ATD. The umwelt: each living being constructs itself while constructing its world (its umwelt), in an eminently social context for human beings. KVP interactions between knowledge (K), values (V) and social practices (P): possible links with certain dimensions of the praxeological approach, but with more emphasis on values (V); Analysis of the different steps of didactic transposition; Comparison of the conceptions of teachers in thirty countries (notion of system of conceptions). The Didactic Transposition Delay (DTD) separates the emergence of new scientific knowledge from its insertion in programs, textbooks or in the teachers’ conceptions.


1997 ◽  
Vol 2 (4) ◽  
pp. 293-300 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ype H. Poortinga ◽  
Ingrid Lunt

In national codes of ethics the practice of psychology is presented as rooted in scientific knowledge, professional skills, and experience. However, it is not self-evident that the body of scientific knowledge in psychology provides an adequate basis for current professional practice. Professional training and experience are seen as necessary for the application of psychological knowledge, but they appear insufficient to defend the soundness of one's practices when challenged in judicial proceedings of a kind that may be faced by psychologists in the European Union in the not too distant future. In seeking to define the basis for the professional competence of psychologists, this article recommends taking a position of modesty concerning the scope and effectiveness of psychological interventions. In many circumstances, psychologists can only provide partial advice, narrowing down the range of possible courses of action more by eliminating unpromising ones than by pointing out the most correct or most favorable one. By emphasizing rigorous evaluation, the profession should gain in accountability and, in the long term, in respectability.


1989 ◽  
Vol 34 (5) ◽  
pp. 467-469
Author(s):  
Clifford I. Notarius

2017 ◽  
Vol 4 (4) ◽  
pp. 180-209 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah L. Desmarais ◽  
Joseph Simons-Rudolph ◽  
Christine Shahan Brugh ◽  
Eileen Schilling ◽  
Chad Hoggan

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