Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- What to Cover and When
- Alternative Frameworks Amongst University of Plymouth Astronomy Students
- Identifying and Addressing Astronomy Misconceptions in the Classroom
- Learning Effectiveness of Lecture versus Laboratory: are labs worth it?
- Robot Telescopes: a new era in access to astronomy
- The Teaching/Learning of Astronomy at the Elementary School Level
- The Influences of the National Curriculum in Children's Misconceptions about Astronomy and the Use of these Misconceptions in the Development of Interactive Teaching Materials
- Role of Novel Scientific Results in Learning
- The Jupiter-Comet Collision: some conceptual implications
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
The Influences of the National Curriculum in Children's Misconceptions about Astronomy and the Use of these Misconceptions in the Development of Interactive Teaching Materials
from 3 - The Student Learning Process
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 June 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Preface
- Participants
- Welcome and Opening Address
- Astronomy Education: an International Perspective
- Special Lecture: Sundials in London – Linking architecture and astronomy
- 1 University Education
- 2 Distance Learning and Electronic Media in Teaching Astronomy
- 3 The Student Learning Process
- What to Cover and When
- Alternative Frameworks Amongst University of Plymouth Astronomy Students
- Identifying and Addressing Astronomy Misconceptions in the Classroom
- Learning Effectiveness of Lecture versus Laboratory: are labs worth it?
- Robot Telescopes: a new era in access to astronomy
- The Teaching/Learning of Astronomy at the Elementary School Level
- The Influences of the National Curriculum in Children's Misconceptions about Astronomy and the Use of these Misconceptions in the Development of Interactive Teaching Materials
- Role of Novel Scientific Results in Learning
- The Jupiter-Comet Collision: some conceptual implications
- 4 Planetarium Education and Training
- 5 Public Education in Astronomy
- 6 Teaching Astronomy in the Schools
- Posters
- Final Address
- Authors
Summary
It is now well established that children construct their own explanations for the easily observed astronomical events before they receive any formal education in astronomy (see Mali & Howe, 1985; Nussbaum & Novak, 1976; Vosnaidou, 1991. It is also generally accepted that childrens notions, or ‘alternative frameworks’ are tenacious and frequently pass into adulthood (Gunstone et al, 1981). Baxter's (1989) survey revealed a hierarchy of alternative frameworks about astronomy that became less naive as age increases, but also revealed that many pupils leaving school at the age of 16 years did not explain the easily observed astronomical events within a post-Copernican framework.
Until the introduction of a National Curriculum in 1989, astronomy rarely featured in English schools’ science curricula (see Lintern-Ball, 1972; Baxter, 1991). Therefore, it is not surprising to discover that many children and adults (Durant, Evans and Thomas, 1989) have concepts about astronomy that bear a closer resemblance to those of the Dark Ages than the 20th-century space age.
For over six years now astronomy has been an established part of English children's school science experience. The survey reported in this paper was carried out to discover if children's alternative frameworks have been affected by the more widespread teaching of astronomy.
Methods of Investigation
This study investigated children's ideas about the same four astronomical domains researched in the 1988 survey (see Baxter, 1989):
Planet Earth in space.
Day and night.
Phases of the Moon.
The seasons.
The study employed the same astronomy conceptual survey instrument developed for the 1988 survey (see Baxter, 1989, for full details of the survey method).
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- New Trends in Astronomy Teaching , pp. 139 - 146Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1998
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