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Metaphor and Analogy in Science Education 2006 Edition
Contributor(s): Aubusson, Peter J. (Editor), Harrison, Allan G. (Editor), Ritchie, Stephen M. (Editor)
ISBN: 1402038291     ISBN-13: 9781402038297
Publisher: Springer
OUR PRICE:   $104.49  
Product Type: Hardcover - Other Formats
Published: December 2005
Qty:
Annotation: This book brings together powerful ideas and new developments from internationally recognised scholars and classroom practitioners to provide theoretical and practical knowledge to inform progress in science education. This is achieved through a series of related chapters reporting research on analogy and metaphor in science education. Throughout the book, contributors not only highlight successful applications of analogies and metaphors, but also foreshadow exciting developments for research and practice. Themes include metaphor and analogy: best practice, as reasoning; for learning; applications in teacher development; in science education research; philosophical and theoretical foundations. Accordingly, the book is likely to appeal to a wide audience of science educators ? classroom practitioners, student teachers, teacher educators and researchers.
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Education | Teaching Methods & Materials - Science & Technology
- Science | Study & Teaching
Dewey: 507
LCCN: 2006296209
Series: Science & Technology Education Library
Physical Information: 0.55" H x 6.58" W x 9.48" (1.15 lbs) 210 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:
Years ago a primary teacher told me about a great series of lessons she had just had. The class had visited rock pools on the seashore, and when she asked them about their observations they talked about: it was like a factory, it was like a church, it was like a garden, it was like our kitchen at breakfast time, etc. Each student's analogy could be elaborated, and these analogies provided her with strongly engaged students and a great platform from which to develop their learning about biological diversity and interdependence. In everyday life we learn so many things by comparing and contrasting. The use of analogies and metaphors is important in science itself and their use in teaching science seems a natural extension, but textbooks with their own sparse logic, do not help teachers or students. David Ausubel in the 1960s had advocated the use of 'advance organisers' to introduce the teaching of conceptual material in the sciences, and some of these had an analogical character. However, research on the value of this idea was cumbersome and indecisive, and it ceased after just a few studies. In the 1980s research into children's conceptions of scientific phenomena and concepts really burgeoned, and it was soon followed by an exploration of a new set of pedagogical strategies that recognised a student in a science class is much more than a tabula rasa.