From a Multicultural to Multinatural Science Education: Perspectives from an Amerindian Perspectivism for Post-pandemic Scenarios

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

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From a Multicultural to Multinatural Science Education: Perspectives from an Amerindian Perspectivism for Post-pandemic Scenarios. / Nascimento, Matheus; dos Santos, Bruno Ferreira; Moura, Cristiano B.
A Sociopolitical Turn in Science Education: Contemporary Trends and Issues in Science Education. Hrsg. / Cristiano Moura. Band 62 Springer International Publishing, 2024. S. 319-335.

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenKapitelbegutachtet

Harvard

Nascimento, M, dos Santos, BF & Moura, CB 2024, From a Multicultural to Multinatural Science Education: Perspectives from an Amerindian Perspectivism for Post-pandemic Scenarios. in C Moura (Hrsg.), A Sociopolitical Turn in Science Education: Contemporary Trends and Issues in Science Education. Bd. 62, Springer International Publishing, S. 319-335. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-78586-3_17

APA

Nascimento, M., dos Santos, B. F., & Moura, C. B. (2024). From a Multicultural to Multinatural Science Education: Perspectives from an Amerindian Perspectivism for Post-pandemic Scenarios. In C. Moura (Hrsg.), A Sociopolitical Turn in Science Education: Contemporary Trends and Issues in Science Education (Band 62, S. 319-335). Springer International Publishing. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-78586-3_17

Vancouver

Nascimento M, dos Santos BF, Moura CB. From a Multicultural to Multinatural Science Education: Perspectives from an Amerindian Perspectivism for Post-pandemic Scenarios. in Moura C, Hrsg., A Sociopolitical Turn in Science Education: Contemporary Trends and Issues in Science Education. Band 62. Springer International Publishing. 2024. S. 319-335 doi: 10.1007/978-3-031-78586-3_17

Bibtex

@inbook{43da156d432646b3bce0d813cdc49113,
title = "From a Multicultural to Multinatural Science Education: Perspectives from an Amerindian Perspectivism for Post-pandemic Scenarios",
abstract = "In the last three decades, some articles have examined a definition of science presented from multicultural perspectives in contrast to a universalist perspective of science. In this sense, a multicultural perspective on education is introduced to help students to acquire scientific knowledge without violating their cultural beliefs and experiences. More recently, the boundaries of the multicultural perspective in science education have expanded to incorporate other theoretical considerations, however, maintaining the vision of the uniqueness of “nature” and the multiplicity of “culture”. In our view, the COVID-19 pandemic reinforced not only the necessity of a socio-political turn of science education, but also an ontological turn, which would take into account more seriously and in ontological ways our relationships with the more-than-human world. Still, it is ill-defined and ill-conceptualized what this might mean to science education research and practices. In this chapter, inspired by Viveiros de Castro{\textquoteright}s works (2015, 2017) and indigenous thinkers (Kopenawa, 2013; Krenak, 2019), we aim to connect the Amerindian thought and the multinaturalism with movements inside our field trying to reshape science and science education for a post-pandemic world. Implications of multinaturalism for science classrooms and for educating science teachers are also explored.",
author = "Matheus Nascimento and {dos Santos}, {Bruno Ferreira} and Moura, {Cristiano B.}",
year = "2024",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-031-78586-3_17",
language = "English",
volume = "62",
pages = "319--335",
editor = "Cristiano Moura",
booktitle = "A Sociopolitical Turn in Science Education",
publisher = "Springer International Publishing",
address = "Switzerland",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - From a Multicultural to Multinatural Science Education

T2 - Perspectives from an Amerindian Perspectivism for Post-pandemic Scenarios

AU - Nascimento, Matheus

AU - dos Santos, Bruno Ferreira

AU - Moura, Cristiano B.

PY - 2024

Y1 - 2024

N2 - In the last three decades, some articles have examined a definition of science presented from multicultural perspectives in contrast to a universalist perspective of science. In this sense, a multicultural perspective on education is introduced to help students to acquire scientific knowledge without violating their cultural beliefs and experiences. More recently, the boundaries of the multicultural perspective in science education have expanded to incorporate other theoretical considerations, however, maintaining the vision of the uniqueness of “nature” and the multiplicity of “culture”. In our view, the COVID-19 pandemic reinforced not only the necessity of a socio-political turn of science education, but also an ontological turn, which would take into account more seriously and in ontological ways our relationships with the more-than-human world. Still, it is ill-defined and ill-conceptualized what this might mean to science education research and practices. In this chapter, inspired by Viveiros de Castro’s works (2015, 2017) and indigenous thinkers (Kopenawa, 2013; Krenak, 2019), we aim to connect the Amerindian thought and the multinaturalism with movements inside our field trying to reshape science and science education for a post-pandemic world. Implications of multinaturalism for science classrooms and for educating science teachers are also explored.

AB - In the last three decades, some articles have examined a definition of science presented from multicultural perspectives in contrast to a universalist perspective of science. In this sense, a multicultural perspective on education is introduced to help students to acquire scientific knowledge without violating their cultural beliefs and experiences. More recently, the boundaries of the multicultural perspective in science education have expanded to incorporate other theoretical considerations, however, maintaining the vision of the uniqueness of “nature” and the multiplicity of “culture”. In our view, the COVID-19 pandemic reinforced not only the necessity of a socio-political turn of science education, but also an ontological turn, which would take into account more seriously and in ontological ways our relationships with the more-than-human world. Still, it is ill-defined and ill-conceptualized what this might mean to science education research and practices. In this chapter, inspired by Viveiros de Castro’s works (2015, 2017) and indigenous thinkers (Kopenawa, 2013; Krenak, 2019), we aim to connect the Amerindian thought and the multinaturalism with movements inside our field trying to reshape science and science education for a post-pandemic world. Implications of multinaturalism for science classrooms and for educating science teachers are also explored.

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-031-78586-3_17

DO - 10.1007/978-3-031-78586-3_17

M3 - Chapter

VL - 62

SP - 319

EP - 335

BT - A Sociopolitical Turn in Science Education

A2 - Moura, Cristiano

PB - Springer International Publishing

ER -

DOI

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