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E-grāmata: Aesthetic Experience in Science Education: Learning and Meaning-Making as Situated Talk and Action

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From a background in evolutionary ecology, Wickman (Stockholm Office of Education) treats aesthetic experience as being as central to science and science education as other endeavors. He notes that little research on this dimension has been conducted since Michael Klapper remarked in 1969 that: "...beauty is not an ugly word in the education of chemists." In a pragmatist revision of epidemiology, the author analyzes the relation of aesthetics to values, learning, and teacher dialog in which aesthetic judgments occur. A quote on humor, another rarely considered aspect of science, concludes his case for viewing science education more humanistically. Annotation ©2005 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)

This book examines the role of aesthetic experience in learning science and in science education from the perspective of knowledge as action and language use, based on the writings of John Dewey and Ludwig Wittgenstein. It offers a novel contribution to the current debate on how to understand motivation, participation, and learning; and a new methodology of studying learning in action.


This book examines the role of aesthetic experience in learning science and in science education from the perspective of knowledge as action and language use. The theoretical underpinnings are based on the writings of John Dewey and Ludwig Wittgenstein. In their spirit aesthetics is examined as it appears in the lives of people and how it relates to the activities in which they are involved.


Centered around an empirical analysis of how students and their teachers use aesthetic language and acts during laboratory and field work, the book demonstrates that aesthetics is something that is constantly talked about in science class and that these aesthetic experiences are intimately involved in learning science. These empirical findings are related to current debates about the relation between aesthetics and science, and about motivation, participation, learning and socio-cultural issues in science education. This book features:

*an empirical demonstration of the importance and specific roles of aesthetic experiences in learning science;

*a novel contribution to the current debate on how to understand motivation, participation and learning; and

*a new methodology of studying learning in action.


Part I sketches out the theoretical concepts of Wickman's practical epistemology analysis of the fundamental role of aesthetics in science and science education. Part II develops these concepts through an analysis of the use of aesthetic judgments when students and teachers are talking in university science classes. Part III sums up the general implications of the theoretical underpinnings and empirical findings for teaching and learning science. Here Wickman expands the findings of his study beyond the university setting to K-8 school science, and explicates what it would mean to make science education more aesthetically meaningful.


Wickman's conclusions deal to a large extent with aesthetic experience as individual transformation and with people's prospects for participation in an activity such as science education. These conclusions have significance beyond science teaching and learning that should be of concern to educators generally. This book is intended for educational researchers, graduate students, and teacher educators in science education internationally, as well as those interested in aesthetics, philosophy of education, discourse analysis, socio-cultural issues, motivation, learning and meaning-making more generally.

Recenzijas

"...Wickman has written a composition that is intriguing and stimulating....Wickman's quest to intrigue others to pursue science through aesthetics has been a successful journey. The literature presented in the text was far beyond a superficial level." PsycCRITIQUES

Preface ix
Acknowledgments xv
Beauty and the Beast
1(26)
Part I: The Continuity of Experience
Distinctions and Continuity
27(24)
Aesthetic Experience as Practical Epistemology
51(26)
Part II: Aesthetic Experience in Science Class
Setting the Scene
77(4)
Normative Continuity of Aesthetic Experience
81(22)
Cognitive Continuity of Aesthetic Experience
103(6)
Continuity of Aesthetic Experiences
109(6)
Transformation of Aesthetic Experiences
115(14)
The Immediacy of Aesthetic Experiences
129(6)
Part III: The Role of Aesthetic Experience in Science Education
Widening the Outlook
135(12)
Educational Consequences
147(18)
Coda
165(2)
References 167(10)
Author Index 177(4)
Subject Index 181


Per-Olof Wickman