18 research outputs found
Mediterranean models for integrating environmental education and Earth sciences through Earth systems education
Practitioners of modern environmental education frequently find
themselves collaborating with those who are engaged in integrating the science
disciplines in search of answers to natural hazard prediction/protection,
understanding the deep sea and space, and especially confronting pressing
environmental concerns with a basis in Earth sciences. Indeed, it is a lack of
understanding of Earth systems processes and feedback mechanisms that has
resulted in humans initiating or exacerbating environmental problems for
centuries. In this paper the authors provide a perspective on the established fields
of environmental education and Earth science, and propose a practical
combination that is of larger global import as well as more personal relevance
than either of the originals: Earth systems Education. The role of the Earth
systems education model in integrating the science curriculum is discussed with
regional examples from Israel and Cyprus.peer-reviewe
Global science literacy : definition, needs assessment and concerns for Cyprus
Global Science Literacy has as its goals to stimulate an interest in
science, represent modern technological goals of science, develop international
understanding, relate science to social needs, and develop thinking and
problem-solving skills for the 21st Century. Such an approach is proposed as
viable on an international basis for conceptual strength in integrated science
courses. Assessment of GSL’s potential in Cyprus serves as an example of
preparations needed and concerns to be addressed if GSL is to become the basis
of the science curriculum. Toward this end, a survey of teachers throughout
Cyprus identified teachers’ priorities for environmental issues and system
science concepts their students should know, the teachers’ knowledge of those
concepts and issues, and their current levels of teaching them. This paper will
discuss the teachers’ relative perceptions of local and global understandings,
Earth systems science, and teacher education issues involved in fostering
Global Science Literacy.peer-reviewe
Ohio Students' Knowledge and Attitudes about the Oceans and Great Lakes
Author Institution: School of Natural Resources, The Ohio State University ; Science and Mathematics Education, The Ohio State UniversityA program to develop instructional materials for implementing marine and aquatic education in Ohio middle schools was begun by Ohio Sea Grant in 1977. This was followed 3 years later by a grant to disseminate the materials to schools in Ohio. To determine the effectiveness of the dissemination process a baseline study was conducted in the autumn of 1980. The survey obtained information on attitudes and knowledge of the Great Lakes and oceans from fifth and ninth grade students in randomly selected schools within 3 arbitrarily determined zones: the lake region, the central region and the Ohio River region. In addition, students responded to items to determine their perceptions of the sources of their knowledge
Ocean and Great Lakes Awareness Among Fifth and Ninth Grade Ohio Students: A Continuing Study
Author Institution: School of Natural Resources and College of Education, The Ohio State UniversityThe Ohio Sea Grant Education Program conducted a baseline study of ocean and Great Lakes awareness among Ohio's fifth and ninth grade students in 1979, and repeated it with some curriculum-specific additions as a longitudinal study in 1983. This report of the 1983 data indicates that over the 4-year period the ninth graders, cohort of the 1979 fifth graders, increased over 10% in ocean and Great Lakes knowledge scores. However, information considered critical to responsible decision-making is still lacking. Attitudes toward Lake Erie and the oceans, while remaining slightly positive for the group, did not change commensurate with knowledge. A new set of test items dealing specifically with information from Ohio Sea Grant curriculum materials was added to the survey in 1983 to provide a new baseline for future testing. The main self-reported source of student information about these topics changed over the period, so that in 1983 students in both grades were relying more on the classroom than on media sources for aquatic information. The survey will be repeated at regular intervals, continuing a longitudinal study unique to marine and aquatic education in North America