2012
DOI: 10.1002/tea.21067
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New metaphors about culture: Implications for research in science teacher preparation

Abstract: Culture has been commonly used in science education research, in particular to examine issues of equity for students from low-income, racial, and ethnic minority communities. It has provided a lens with which to appreciate science classrooms as cultural places and to recognize the importance of students' cultural ways of being as resources for science learning. Scanning the ways that ''culture'' has been used in recent publications shows that much science education research continues to draw from an older view… Show more

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Cited by 43 publications
(35 citation statements)
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“…Implied solutions to achieving a more equitable science when drawing (implicitly or explicitly) on cultural difference explanations, include: identifying ways to make science more relevant to students' lives (Seiler, (Lee & Fradd, 1988), where teachers are able to relate science instruction to students' linguistic and cultural backgrounds and experiences (Buxton, Salinas, Mahotiere, Lee, & Secada, 2013). The cultural difference theory approaches 'assume, a priori, that cultural worlds of students, science, and/or school science need bridging' (Carlone et al, 2014, p. 658), frame students' and school science's cultural worlds as binaries (Quigley, 2011), and/or treat the concept of culture as static and tidily bound (Seiler, 2013). …”
Section: Insights About Engaging Diverse And/or Fearful Learners In Ementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Implied solutions to achieving a more equitable science when drawing (implicitly or explicitly) on cultural difference explanations, include: identifying ways to make science more relevant to students' lives (Seiler, (Lee & Fradd, 1988), where teachers are able to relate science instruction to students' linguistic and cultural backgrounds and experiences (Buxton, Salinas, Mahotiere, Lee, & Secada, 2013). The cultural difference theory approaches 'assume, a priori, that cultural worlds of students, science, and/or school science need bridging' (Carlone et al, 2014, p. 658), frame students' and school science's cultural worlds as binaries (Quigley, 2011), and/or treat the concept of culture as static and tidily bound (Seiler, 2013). …”
Section: Insights About Engaging Diverse And/or Fearful Learners In Ementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Metaphors allow indirect comparisons to be made between a more familiar thought or object and another thought or object; thus associations with abstract thoughts can be made more easily (Seiler, 2013). However, metaphors not only consist of comparisons but also allow certain new elements of experienced things to be noticed Saban, 2006).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…We also situate this study amidst identity studies literature with our focus on individuals' agency and multi‐level structures that enable and constrain agency (Archer et al, 2012; Elmesky, ; Jackson & Seiler, ; Kane, ; Seiler, ; Tan, Calabrese Barton, Kang, & O'Neill, ; Wood, Erichson, & Anicha, ). If students claim to dislike science in middle school after loving it in elementary school, we must probe more deeply into the cultural (implicit) meanings of science in their school science experiences.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%