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Animals and Science Education: Ethics, Curriculum and Pedagogy 1st ed. 2017 [Hardback]

  • Formāts: Hardback, 265 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 5502 g, 78 Illustrations, black and white; XVIII, 265 p. 78 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Sērija : Environmental Discourses in Science Education 2
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319563742
  • ISBN-13: 9783319563749
  • Hardback
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  • Formāts: Hardback, 265 pages, height x width: 235x155 mm, weight: 5502 g, 78 Illustrations, black and white; XVIII, 265 p. 78 illus., 1 Hardback
  • Sērija : Environmental Discourses in Science Education 2
  • Izdošanas datums: 26-Jun-2017
  • Izdevniecība: Springer International Publishing AG
  • ISBN-10: 3319563742
  • ISBN-13: 9783319563749

This book discusses how we can inspire today’s youth to engage in challenging and productive discussions around the past, present and future role of animals in science education. Animals play a large role in the sciences and science education and yet they remain one of the least visible topics in the educational literature. This book is intended to cultivate research topics, conversations, and dispositions for the ethical use of animals in science and education. This book explores the vital role of animals with/in science education, specimens, protected species, and other associated issues with regards to the role of animals in science. Topics explored include ethical, curriculum and pedagogical dimensions, involving invertebrates, engineering solutions that contribute to ecosystems, the experiences of animals under our care, aesthetic and contemplative practices alongside science, school-based ethical dialogue, nature study for promoting inquiry and sustainability, the challenge of whether animals need to be used for science whatsoever, reconceptualizing museum specimens, cultivating socioscientific issues and epistemic practice, cultural integrity and citizen science, the care and nurturance of gender-balanced curriculum choices for science education, and theoretical conversations around cultivating critical thinking skills and ethical dispositions. The diverse authors in this book take on the logic of domination and symbolic violence embodied within the scientific enterprise that has systematically subjugated animals and nature, and emboldened the anthropocentric and exploitative expressions for the future role of animals.

At a time when animals are getting excluded from classrooms (too dangerous! too many allergies!  too dirty!), this book is an important counterpoint. Interacting with animals helps students develop empathy, learn to care for living things, engage with content. We need more animals in the science curriculum, not less.

David Sobel, Senior Faculty, Education Department, Antioch University New England

Recenzijas

This text is an approachable, informative, and playful resource to augment curricular and other pedagogical practices in science education with a dimension of animal ethics. Readers involved in education at the grade school level will find this text inspiring, as will readers in educational studies. Scholars interested in practical applications of ideas from animal ethics, ecological ethics, and/or interspecies justice will find this text useful for its case studies. Summing Up: Highly recommended. All readers. (S. M. Weiss, Choice, Vol. 55 (10), June, 2018)

1 Worm Spit: Integrating Curriculum Through a Study of Silk and the Amazing Silk Worm
1(14)
Michael L. Bentley
Teresa Auldridge
2 You Can Give a Bee Some Water, But You Can't Make Her Drink: A Socioscientific Approach to Honey Bees in Science Education
15(14)
Jonathan Snow
Maria S. Rivera Maulucci
3 Engineering a Solution for Managing Fish Waste
29(12)
Alexandra West Jefferies
4 Learning Science in Aquariums and on Whalewatching Boats: The Hidden Curriculum of the Deployment of Other Animals
41(10)
Teresa Lloro-Bidart
Constance Russell
5 Tracing the Anthrozoological Landscape of Central Iowa: Place and Pedagogical Possibilities
51(18)
Cori Jakubiak
6 Life After the Fact(ory): Pedagogy of Care at an Animal Sanctuary
69(16)
Christopher Bentley
Steve Alsop
7 Ethical-Ecological Holism in Science Pedagogy: In Honor of Sea Urchins
85(14)
Lee Beavington
Heesoon Bai
Serenna Celeste Romanycia
8 A Story of Chicks, Science Fairs and the Ethics of Students' Biomedical Research
99(24)
Sophia (Sun Kyung) Jeong
Deborah J. Tippins
Shakhnoza Kayumova
9 Spiders, Rats, and Education
123(12)
Jimmy Karlan
10 How Technology Can Replace Animals in Lab Practices
135(10)
Eduardo Dopico
Eva Garcia-Vazquez
11 Using Object-Based Learning to Understand Animal Evolution
145(14)
Paul Davies
Joanne Nicholl
12 Death in a Jar: The Study of Life
159(10)
Mary Rebecca Warbington Wells
13 Socio-scientific Issues for Scientific Literacy - The Evolution of an Environmental Education Program with a Focus on Birds
169(18)
Andrew T. Kinslow
Troy D. Sadler
14 Hawaiian Citizen Science: Journeys of Self-Discovery and Understanding of Scientific Concepts Through Culture and Nature Study in School Science Classes
187(14)
Jennifer L.H. Kuwahara
15 Care-Based Citizen Science: Nurturing an Ethic of Care to Support the Preservation of Biodiversity
201(22)
Renee Lyons
Cassie F. Quigley
Michelle Cook
16 Mapping Conceptions of Wolf Hunting onto an Ecological Worldview Conceptual Framework---Hunting for a Worldview Theory
223(20)
Teresa J. Shume
17 A Framework Within Which to Determine How We Should Use Animals in Science Education
243(18)
Michael J. Reiss
Index 261