首页
外语
计算机
考研
公务员
职业资格
财经
工程
司法
医学
专升本
自考
实用职业技能
登录
外语
According to the interviewee, what is the problem of the present science education?
According to the interviewee, what is the problem of the present science education?
admin
2015-01-09
63
问题
According to the interviewee, what is the problem of the present science education?
W: Today’s show is all about this week’s special issue on Grand Challenges in Science Education, including science education for non-scientists. Noah Feinstein, thanks for coming on our show.
M: Pleasure.
W: Now please share something about your paper on re-imagining science education for non-scientists.
M: Well, what science education has tried to do for a long time is to give students a sort of minimal complete set of scientific facts and principles.(1)Instead of doing that, we should make the connection between science and real life, or daily life. It is not just a way to teach the same old science content. It’s actually one of the most important skills, so they are able to make those connections on their own when the teacher isn’t there to help them.(l)We don’t spend, I would say, nearly enough time teaching kids how to connect science with their daily experience.
W: And then there’s the fact that we tend to categorize people as scientists and non-scientists or scientists and "other". What’s the problem with that?
M: Right. Non-scientist is a category that really only makes sense to scientists. The reality is that everybody is a non-scientist. Even scientists are non-scientists most of the time when they’re not at their labs, and there are so many different groups of people who respond to science differently because of the demographic group they belong to, because of their earlier exposure to science, because of their particular personal and cultural values.
W: Now you mentioned some alternative pedagogies that may help students to... to better interpret and evaluate the science that they may come across later in life. So tell me about those.
M:(2)So one cool thing which a group of education researchers has done in the past five years is engaging students in science journalism through a project called SciJourn, which employs a professional science journalist as an editor and has students not only investigating scientific topics that they find interesting but also thinking about how they would have to explain those scientific topics to other people who might have different interests than them. Another one that’s attracting a lot of attention these days is called problem-based learning.
W: Problem-based learning?
M: Yeah, it starts with a troubling question—a question that’s not neatly defined in scientific terms or in disciplinary terms.(3)Students have to work usually in a team to look for new information and develop an answer. That’s the kind of pedagogy which has proven enormously effective in medical schools. I think it has a really wide range of applications that we could take advantage of to help students learn to cross back and forth between the world of their daily experience and the world of science.
W:(3)And these all have something to do with one of your other priorities, which is cultivating appreciation for science.
M:(3)Absolutely. One of the things which -and this really gets me—we don’t really make room for students, especially, to develop the sort of deep, weird personal interests in topics that relate to science.
W: And what are some ways in which we can develop and cultivate that kind of interest in young students?
M: There are so many things that are going on right now in the world of public engagement with science. There are things like makerspaces, which are attracting a lot of attention. A makerspace is not necessarily going to lead you to science, but that kind of deep technical involvement in building things.
W; That sounds interesting.
M:(4)And there are also an increasing number of technological platforms for kids to learn about science, like Fold It or Galaxy Zoo. These games which scientists have come up with enable people who are not scientists to actually participate in the scientific process. Finding space to get that kind of project into schools is, I think, a high priority, and I think it’s something that would make science education more fun.
W: So what can scientists do in all of this? Is there a role that they can play in arming non-scientists with the skills that they may need?
M: Scientists may not know this, but they are actually quite influential in science education, both in schools and out. And there are some more general things that I think that scientists can do, and there are also some more specific ones.
W; What is the most general thing?
M: The most general thing is to be willing to question the way that we’ve always done things and to bring the same skepticism to our assumptions about science education. We have to be willing to change the balance and to let go of some of this stuff that we’ve always done in order to come up with the science education that is really going to be useful for future citizens.
W: And the more specific one?
M: Well,(5)don’t hide how science really works. When scientists write and talk about science, they don’t necessarily talk about how frustrating it can be, how careful you need to be to make sure that everything is as right as it can be, and how likely it is that that’s going to turn out to be wrong next year or not quite the right solution.
W: I hope that science education will become more attractive. Noah Feinstein, thank you so much.
M: Thanks so much.
选项
A、Scientific facts and principles are too dull to attract students.
B、There is little connection between science and daily life.
C、The content of the science teaching is too old.
D、Teachers do not provide enough help in students’ learning.
答案
B
解析
转载请注明原文地址:https://kaotiyun.com/show/N5dO777K
0
专业英语八级
相关试题推荐
ThefirstcluecamewhenIgotmyhaircut.Thestylistofferednotjusttheusualcoffeeorteabutacomplimentarynail-polish
InChina,itisaconventionalpracticetodogooddeedswithoutseekingrecognition.Contrarytothis,quiteahandfulofphila
Accordingtothenews,thehealthcarereformbyObamabenefits
Changesinthewaypeoplelivebringaboutchangesinthejobsthattheydo.Moroandmorepeopleliveintownsandcitiesinst
不消说,相识的人数是随着年龄增加的,一个人年龄越大,走过的地方,当过的职务越多,相识的人理该越增加了。可是相识的人并不就是朋友。我们和许多人相识,或是因为事务关系,或是因为偶然的机缘——如在别人请客的时候同席吃过饭之类。见面时点头或握手,有事时走访或通信,
TheOriginofMoney Intheearlieststagesofman’sdevelopmenthehadnomoreneedofmoneythananimalshave.Hewascontent
Thestudyofalanguagethroughthecourseofitshistoryiscalled
BenBuchananandA,MagicBookTheTexasteenisdevouringthe672pagesofHarryPotterandtheHalf-BloodPrincewrittenby
A、Makingad.plans.B、Sellingproductssuccessfully.C、Developingnewmarkets.D、Makinganewproduct.C采访的记者专门询问广告人这个问题,所以答案应该很
对生命没有寄托的人,青年时代和“儿时”对他格外宝贵。这种罗曼蒂克的回忆其实并不是发现了“儿时”的真正了不得,而是感觉到“中年”以后的衰退。本来,生命只有一次,对于谁都是宝贵的。但是,假使他的生命溶化在大众里面,假使他天天在为这世界干些什么,那么,他总在生长
随机试题
大黄虫丸的组成药物中含有
A、吻合口梗阻B、急性输入段完全性梗阻C、十二指肠残端破裂D、倾倒综合征E、输出段梗阻胃大部切除术后突发上腹部剧痛、频繁呕吐,呕吐物量少、不含胆汁,呕吐后症状不缓解
A.AFP明显升高,有乙型肝炎病史B.AFP轻度升高,有乙型肝炎病史C.AFP阴性,有口腹避孕药史D.CEA升高,无乙型肝炎病史E.AFP阴性,有乙型肝炎病史肝癌患者临床特点为
患者男性,23岁,以四肢无力3d为主诉来诊,患者于1周前淋雨,3d前出现四肢对称性乏力,以下肢为重,不能行走,且日益严重,于当地医院行血钾检测为正常,来诊。患者出现下列哪种症状更支持本诊断
在冷拔低碳钢丝的各种应用中,应选择甲级钢丝的是()。
某单层单跨工业厂房建于正常固结的黏性土地基上,跨度27m,长度84m,采用柱下钢筋混凝土独立基础。厂房基础完工后,室内外均进行填土:厂房投入使用后,室内地面局部范围有大面积堆载。堆载宽度6.8m,堆载的纵向长度40m。具体的厂房基础及地基情况、地面荷载大小
位于A省某市区的一家建筑企业为增值税一般纳税人,在B省某市区提供写字楼和桥梁建造业务,2019年4月具体经营业务如下:(1)写字楼项目按照工程进度及合同约定,本月取得含税收入3300万元,并开具了增值税专用发票。该建筑企业将部分业务进行了分包,本
一国的进口贸易额会受许多因素的影响,如果其他条件不变,这些因素与进口贸易额的一般关系是( )。
医学界通常认为,人类免疫缺陷性病毒主要是通过男性传播的,而最新的医学研究则表明,这种流行的观点有待( )。
简述个体性格形成的影响因素。
最新回复
(
0
)