Why We Teach Science (and Why We Should)

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Few people question the importance of science education in American schooling. The public readily accepts that it is the key to economic growth through innovation, develops the ability to reason more effectively, and enables us to solve the everyday problems we encounter through knowing how the world works. Good science teaching results in all these benefits and more -- or so we think. But what if all this is simply wrong? What if the benefits we assume science education produces turn out to be an illusion, nothing more than wishful thinking?

In
Why We Teach Science (and Why We Should), former high school teacher and historian of science education John L. Rudolph examines the reasons we've long given for teaching science and assesses how they hold up to what we know about what students really learn (or don't learn) in science classrooms and what research tells us about how people actually interact with science in their daily lives. The results will surprise you. Instead of more and more rigorous traditional science education to fill the STEM pipeline, Rudolph challenges us to think outside the box and makes the case for an expansive science education aimed instead at rebuilding trust between science and the public -- something we desperately need in our current era of impending natural challenges and science denial.

Author(s): John L. Rudolph
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Year: 2023

Language: English
Pages: 221
City: Oxford

Cover
Titlepage
Copyright
Preface
Contents
Introduction
Part 1 WHAT WE SAY
1 The Reasons We Teach Science
Science Education for Culture
Science Education for Better Thinking
Science Education for Utility—Personal Use, National Security, and Economic Growth
Science Education for Democracy
Part 2 WHAT WE DO
2 The Science Education We Have
3 Should We Be Training More Scientists? The Numbers Say No
4 The Failure of Scientific Literacy
5 How Well Does ''The Science Education We Have'' Actually Work?
Science Education for Everyday Problems
Science Education for Democratic Decision-Making
Science Education for Culture
Science Education for Future Scientists and Engineers (An Aside on Technical Training)
6 Science for Better Thinking and the Limits of "Doing'' Science
Part 3 What We Need
7 Science Education for Building Public Trust
Teaching How Scientists Know What They Know
Teaching about the Scientific Enterprise in Society
8 How To Get There
Revitalize the Civic Mission of the High School
Change the Way We Prepare Science Teachers
Build a Science Education Based on Evidence
Notes
Index