2019
DOI: 10.1002/tea.21551
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Representations of nature of science in U.S. science standards: A historical account with contemporary implications

Abstract: This study evaluated the representations of nature of science (NOS) in U.S. state science standards, and examined the changes in these representations from documents advanced in the 1980s through 2016. Drawing from the consensus perspective on NOS and prior studies focusing on the analysis of textual content, documents were inspected for 10 target NOS aspects: the empirical, tentative, inferential, creative, theory-driven, and social NOS, in addition to the myth of "The Scientific Method," the nature of scient… Show more

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Cited by 18 publications
(8 citation statements)
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References 54 publications
(78 reference statements)
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“…In a content analysis of U.S. state science standards for 10 NOS aspects (empirical, tentative, inferential, creative, theory‐driven, and social dimension of science, the “scientific method”, nature of scientific theories and laws, and socio‐cultural embeddedness of NOS), researchers found that several key NOS aspects were not addressed and that standards had improved very little in their treatment of NOS in the past 30 years. Any representation of 10 NOS aspects ranged from 41% (scientific laws) to 95% (empirical) of 63 state standards documents from 2000 to 2016 (Summers et al, 2019). Note that, of these aspects, all except inferential are addressed explicitly to some degree in the K‐2 or 3–5 bands in Appendix H of the NGSS Appendix H (NGSS Lead States, 2013).…”
Section: Review Of the Literature: Nos For Young Learnersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In a content analysis of U.S. state science standards for 10 NOS aspects (empirical, tentative, inferential, creative, theory‐driven, and social dimension of science, the “scientific method”, nature of scientific theories and laws, and socio‐cultural embeddedness of NOS), researchers found that several key NOS aspects were not addressed and that standards had improved very little in their treatment of NOS in the past 30 years. Any representation of 10 NOS aspects ranged from 41% (scientific laws) to 95% (empirical) of 63 state standards documents from 2000 to 2016 (Summers et al, 2019). Note that, of these aspects, all except inferential are addressed explicitly to some degree in the K‐2 or 3–5 bands in Appendix H of the NGSS Appendix H (NGSS Lead States, 2013).…”
Section: Review Of the Literature: Nos For Young Learnersmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…When discussing the CCCs, eight articles focused on the relationship between the CCCs and the NOS or the role of science, technology, and society (STS) (Akerson et al, 2018; Gonzalez‐Garcia et al, 2019; Lederman & Lederman, 2014, 2016; McComas & Nouri, 2016; Summers et al, 2019; Summers & Abd‐El‐Khalick et al, 2019; Zeidler et al, 2016). A ninth article, Lederman (2019), discussed this relationship and pointed out particular activities related to the NOS that could also support student learning of the CCCs.…”
Section: Resultsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Furthermore, tentativeness is often highlighted as a particularly central aspect of nature of science (Bell, 2009 ). Accordingly, it has been identified as a component of numerous science education standard documents and curricula in various countries, as shown by McComas and Olson ( 1998 ) and Olson ( 2018 ), as well as Summers et al ( 2019 ). Additionally, scientists themselves frequently describe it as a characteristic of scientific knowledge (Wong & Hodson, 2009 ).…”
Section: Tentativeness Of Scientific Knowledgementioning
confidence: 99%