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Science Comprehension vs. Cultural Cognition as Predictors of Climate Change Risk PerceptionUnknown Date (has links)
This study identified factors that affect climate change risk perception in a
community college class. The purpose of this research was to determine if students were
more influenced by cultural cognition (political affiliation) or science comprehension.
Students in an undergraduate level environmental science and biology class were
evaluated, using an online survey, for science comprehension level, political affiliation
and risk perception at the beginning and end of each course. Data were analyzed to
determine improved scientific literacy and any variation in risk perception. The research
found that science comprehension did not contribute significantly to increased risk
perception and that political affiliation or political views had a more significant effect on
risk perception. / Includes bibliography. / Dissertation (Ph.D.)--Florida Atlantic University, 2017. / FAU Electronic Theses and Dissertations Collection
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Considering Hans-Georg Gadamer's Philosophical Hermeneutics as a Referent for Student Understanding of Nature-of-Science ConceptsRashford, Jared Michael 01 October 2009 (has links)
The purpose of this study is to examine philosophical hermeneutics as a referent for student understanding of Nature-of-Science (NOS) concepts. Rather than focus on a prescriptive set of canons used in addressing NOS pedagogy in K-12 schools, this study seeks to explicate a descriptive set of principles based on Hans Georg-Gadamer’s theory of interpretation that has the potential for developing dispositions necessary for understanding. Central among these are the concepts of fore-structure, prejudice, temporal distance, and history of effect, all of which constitute part of the whole of the hermeneutic circle as envisaged by Gadamer. As such, Gadamer’s hermeneutics is contrasted with Cartesian epistemology and its primacy of method, the Enlightenment’s prejudice against prejudice, the modernist/progressive tendency to consider all situations as problems to be solved by relegating all forms of knowledge to techné, and the subjective nature of interpretation inherent in a hermeneutics of suspicion. The implication of such a conceptual analysis for NOS pedagogy is that student understanding is considered not so much as a cognitive outcome dependent on a series of mental functions but rather as an ontological characteristic of Dasein (being-human) that situates learning in the interchange between interpreter and text. In addition, the philosophical foundations implicit in addressing student understanding of NOS found in many curricular reform efforts and pedagogical practices in science education are questioned. Gadamer’s hermeneutics affords science education a viable philosophical framework within which to consider student understanding of the development of scientific knowledge and the scientific enterprise.
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