“It is not the CO2 itself, it’s the imbalance!”: Conceptual reconstruction of the carbon cycle in global warming

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in KonferenzbändenForschung

Standard

“It is not the CO2 itself, it’s the imbalance!”: Conceptual reconstruction of the carbon cycle in global warming. / Niebert, Kai; Gropengießer, Harald.
Authenticity in Biology Education: Benefits and Challenges; A selection of papers presented at the VIII th conference of European Researchers in Didactics of Biology (ERIDOB) 13-17 July 2010 University of Minho, Braga, Portugal . Hrsg. / Anat Yarden; Graça S Carvalho. Braga: CIEC, Universidade do Minho, 2011. S. 339-352.

Publikation: Beiträge in SammelwerkenAufsätze in KonferenzbändenForschung

Harvard

Niebert, K & Gropengießer, H 2011, “It is not the CO2 itself, it’s the imbalance!”: Conceptual reconstruction of the carbon cycle in global warming. in A Yarden & GS Carvalho (Hrsg.), Authenticity in Biology Education: Benefits and Challenges; A selection of papers presented at the VIII th conference of European Researchers in Didactics of Biology (ERIDOB) 13-17 July 2010 University of Minho, Braga, Portugal . CIEC, Universidade do Minho, Braga, S. 339-352.

APA

Niebert, K., & Gropengießer, H. (2011). “It is not the CO2 itself, it’s the imbalance!”: Conceptual reconstruction of the carbon cycle in global warming. In A. Yarden, & G. S. Carvalho (Hrsg.), Authenticity in Biology Education: Benefits and Challenges; A selection of papers presented at the VIII th conference of European Researchers in Didactics of Biology (ERIDOB) 13-17 July 2010 University of Minho, Braga, Portugal (S. 339-352). CIEC, Universidade do Minho.

Vancouver

Niebert K, Gropengießer H. “It is not the CO2 itself, it’s the imbalance!”: Conceptual reconstruction of the carbon cycle in global warming. in Yarden A, Carvalho GS, Hrsg., Authenticity in Biology Education: Benefits and Challenges; A selection of papers presented at the VIII th conference of European Researchers in Didactics of Biology (ERIDOB) 13-17 July 2010 University of Minho, Braga, Portugal . Braga: CIEC, Universidade do Minho. 2011. S. 339-352

Bibtex

@inbook{254e1def62c34428913fc98c63d13836,
title = "“It is not the CO2 itself, it{\textquoteright}s the imbalance!”: Conceptual reconstruction of the carbon cycle in global warming",
abstract = "The identification of teachers{\textquoteright} conceptions about evolution is important because it enables understanding, for example, how they cope with issues related to the creationism versus evolution conflict inside the classroom. This work was developed within the framework of the European project BIOHEAD-CITIZEN, which considers that scientific knowledge and teachers{\textquoteright} attitudes and values can influence teaching practices. A questionnaire was designed for 19 countries in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. This current paper extends the BIOHEAD-CITIZEN project to a South American country, Brazil, aiming to assess the evolutionist and creationist conceptions of six groups of in-service and future teachers. The questions on evolution were worked out as dependent variables and multivariate analysis was carried out. The results agree with previous results obtained from 12 other countries, in that in-service and future biology teachers give more importance to natural selection and the evolutionary process than other groups of teachers. Compared with those countries, however, the total Brazilian sample shows a higher percentage of creationist conceptions, particularly for Brazilian biology teachers and future teachers. As discussed herein, this may not be an obstacle to teaching evolution as these teachers accept both creationism and evolutionism concomitantly.",
keywords = "Didactics of sciences education",
author = "Kai Niebert and Harald Gropengie{\ss}er",
year = "2011",
language = "English",
isbn = "978-972-8952-19-8",
pages = "339--352",
editor = "Anat Yarden and Carvalho, {Gra{\c c}a S}",
booktitle = "Authenticity in Biology Education",
publisher = "CIEC, Universidade do Minho",
address = "Portugal",

}

RIS

TY - CHAP

T1 - “It is not the CO2 itself, it’s the imbalance!”

T2 - Conceptual reconstruction of the carbon cycle in global warming

AU - Niebert, Kai

AU - Gropengießer, Harald

PY - 2011

Y1 - 2011

N2 - The identification of teachers’ conceptions about evolution is important because it enables understanding, for example, how they cope with issues related to the creationism versus evolution conflict inside the classroom. This work was developed within the framework of the European project BIOHEAD-CITIZEN, which considers that scientific knowledge and teachers’ attitudes and values can influence teaching practices. A questionnaire was designed for 19 countries in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. This current paper extends the BIOHEAD-CITIZEN project to a South American country, Brazil, aiming to assess the evolutionist and creationist conceptions of six groups of in-service and future teachers. The questions on evolution were worked out as dependent variables and multivariate analysis was carried out. The results agree with previous results obtained from 12 other countries, in that in-service and future biology teachers give more importance to natural selection and the evolutionary process than other groups of teachers. Compared with those countries, however, the total Brazilian sample shows a higher percentage of creationist conceptions, particularly for Brazilian biology teachers and future teachers. As discussed herein, this may not be an obstacle to teaching evolution as these teachers accept both creationism and evolutionism concomitantly.

AB - The identification of teachers’ conceptions about evolution is important because it enables understanding, for example, how they cope with issues related to the creationism versus evolution conflict inside the classroom. This work was developed within the framework of the European project BIOHEAD-CITIZEN, which considers that scientific knowledge and teachers’ attitudes and values can influence teaching practices. A questionnaire was designed for 19 countries in Europe, Africa and the Middle East. This current paper extends the BIOHEAD-CITIZEN project to a South American country, Brazil, aiming to assess the evolutionist and creationist conceptions of six groups of in-service and future teachers. The questions on evolution were worked out as dependent variables and multivariate analysis was carried out. The results agree with previous results obtained from 12 other countries, in that in-service and future biology teachers give more importance to natural selection and the evolutionary process than other groups of teachers. Compared with those countries, however, the total Brazilian sample shows a higher percentage of creationist conceptions, particularly for Brazilian biology teachers and future teachers. As discussed herein, this may not be an obstacle to teaching evolution as these teachers accept both creationism and evolutionism concomitantly.

KW - Didactics of sciences education

M3 - Article in conference proceedings

SN - 978-972-8952-19-8

SP - 339

EP - 352

BT - Authenticity in Biology Education

A2 - Yarden, Anat

A2 - Carvalho, Graça S

PB - CIEC, Universidade do Minho

CY - Braga

ER -

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