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The cultural production of 'science' and 'scientist' in high school physics: Girls' access, participation, and resistance.

机译:高中物理中“科学”和“科学家”的文化产物:女孩的进入,参与和抵抗。

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摘要

For over three decades, the gender gap in science and science education has received attention from teachers, policy makers, and scholars of various disciplines. During this time, feminist scholars have posited many reasons why the gender gap in science and science education exists. Early feminist discourse focused on girls' "deficits," while more recent work has begun to consider the problems with science and school science in the quest for a more gender inclusive science. Specifically, feminist scholars advocate a transformation of both how students learn science and the science curriculum that students are expected to learn.;This study was designed to examine more deeply this call for a changed science curriculum and its implications for girls' participation, interest, and scientist identities. If we reinvisioned ways to "do" science, "learn" science, and "be a scientist" in school science, would girls come to see science as something interesting and worth pursuing further? This question framed my ethnographic investigation.;I examined the culturally produced meanings of "science" and "scientist" in two high school physics classrooms (one traditional and one non-traditional class framed around real-world themes), how these meanings reproduced and contested larger sociohistorical (and prototypical) meanings of science and scientist, and how girls participated within and against these meanings. The results complicate the assumption that a classroom that enacts a non-traditional curriculum is "better" for girls. This study explained how each classroom challenged sociohistorical legacies of school science in various "spaces of possibility" and how prototypical meanings pushed the potential of these spaces to the margins. Girls in the traditional physics class generally embraced prototypical meanings because they could easily access "good student" identities. Girls in the non-traditional class, though attracted to alternative practices, struggled with the conflicting promoted student identities that did not allow them easy access to "good student" identities. In neither class were girls' perceptions of what it meant to do science and be a scientist challenged. And, in neither class did girls connect to a legitimate scientist identity. These findings leave unanswered the question of whether changes in pedagogy and curriculum alone will produce more gender fair school science.
机译:在过去的三十多年中,科学和科学教育中的性别差距受到了教师,决策者和各个学科学者的关注。在此期间,女权主义学者提出了科学和科学教育中存在性别差异的许多原因。早期的女权主义论述着重于女孩的“赤字”,而最近的工作已开始考虑科学和学校科学的问题,以寻求更具性别包容性的科学。具体而言,女权主义学者主张改变学生学习科学的方式和期望学生学习的科学课程的方式。本研究旨在更深入地研究这种对改变科学课程的要求及其对女孩的参与,兴趣,和科学家身份。如果我们重新定义了在学校科学中“做”科学,“学习”科学和“当科学家”的方式,女孩们会不会把科学视为有趣的事情,值得进一步追求?这个问题构成了我的人种学调查的框架。;我在两个中学物理教室(围绕现实世界主题构筑的一个传统班级和一个非传统班级)中研究了文化产生的“科学”和“科学家”的含义,这些含义是如何重现和对科学和科学家的更大的社会历史(和原型)意义以及女孩如何参与这些意义并反对这些意义进行了争论。结果使这样的假设变得更加复杂,即制定非传统课程的教室对女孩来说“更好”。这项研究解释了每个教室如何在各种“可能性空间”中挑战学校科学的社会历史遗产,以及原型意义如何将这些空间的潜力推向了边缘。传统物理课中的女孩通常都具有原型意义,因为他们可以轻松获得“好学生”的身份。非传统班级的女孩尽管被另类习俗所吸引,但却与矛盾的,促进学生身份认同的挣扎作斗争,这使得她们无法轻易获得“好学生”身份。在这两个班级中,女孩对做科学和成为科学家的意义的理解都受到了挑战。而且,在这两个班级中,女孩都没有与合法的科学家身份建立联系。这些发现尚未解决仅靠教学法和课程改革是否会产生更多性别公平学校科学的问题。

著录项

  • 作者

    Carlone, Heidi Berenson.;

  • 作者单位

    University of Colorado at Boulder.;

  • 授予单位 University of Colorado at Boulder.;
  • 学科 Science education.
  • 学位 Ph.D.
  • 年度 2000
  • 页码 405 p.
  • 总页数 405
  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 eng
  • 中图分类
  • 关键词

  • 入库时间 2022-08-17 11:47:40

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