2014
DOI: 10.1007/s11422-014-9580-5
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The role of cultural identity as a learning factor in physics: a discussion through the role of science in Brazil

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Cited by 13 publications
(19 citation statements)
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“…Hence, different authors (Hodson 1999;Krugly-Smolska 2013;Allchin 2014;Gurgel et al 2014;Sarukkai 2014), informed by contemporary research from the fields of HOS and Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies of Science (Roberts 2009;Elshakry 2010;Fan 2012), defend the potential of HPS to foster a more historically and culturally accurate view of who scientists are and where scientific knowledge has come from. Besides promoting conceptual change and learning about NOS, and motivating students, HPS presents the possibility of challenging hundreds of years of preconceptions and biased views about scientific communities, essentially by showing that different types of cultures, people and societies (and also gender, race, ethnicity) are (and have been) connected with scientific work.…”
Section: Why and Which Hps In Science Education?mentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Hence, different authors (Hodson 1999;Krugly-Smolska 2013;Allchin 2014;Gurgel et al 2014;Sarukkai 2014), informed by contemporary research from the fields of HOS and Postcolonial and Decolonial Studies of Science (Roberts 2009;Elshakry 2010;Fan 2012), defend the potential of HPS to foster a more historically and culturally accurate view of who scientists are and where scientific knowledge has come from. Besides promoting conceptual change and learning about NOS, and motivating students, HPS presents the possibility of challenging hundreds of years of preconceptions and biased views about scientific communities, essentially by showing that different types of cultures, people and societies (and also gender, race, ethnicity) are (and have been) connected with scientific work.…”
Section: Why and Which Hps In Science Education?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The questionnaire used in the survey was an adapted version of one developed by Gurgel et al (2014) East Asian = 3 White African = 1 Chinese = 1 Other = 2 a Ability groups (sets 1, 2 and 3-from high to low abilities) are classrooms where students with similar abilities (assessed by their schools) are placed together, in opposition to mixed groups, where students with different abilities are placed together (Gurgel et al 2014, p. 369) Considering that their original questionnaire was intended to also investigate students' views on Brazilian participation in science, some changes were made in order to adapt it to a non-country-specific inquiry, especially in relation to questions (b) and (d) displayed above. Additional questions were also included, as further discussed below, to get a deeper understanding of their knowledge about these scientists and countries.…”
Section: Data Collectionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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