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Journal ArticleDOI

Elementary Science Indoors and Out: Teachers, Time, and Testing

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TLDR
In this paper, a mixed-methods research study aimed to document indoor and outdoor fifth grade science experiences in one school in the USA in the context of accountability and standardized testing.
Abstract
In this article, we present the results from a mixed-methods research study aimed to document indoor and outdoor fifth grade science experiences in one school in the USA in the context of accountability and standardized testing. We used quantitative measures to explore students’ science knowledge, environmental attitudes, and outdoor comfort levels, and via qualitative measures, we examined views on science education and environmental issues from multiple sources, including the school’s principal, teachers, and students. Students’ science knowledge in each of the four objectives specified for grade 5 significantly improved during the school year. Qualitative data collected through interviews and observations found limited impressions of outdoor science. Findings revealed that, despite best intentions and a school culture that supported outdoor learning, it was very difficult in practice for teachers to supplement their classroom science instruction with outdoor activities. They felt constrained by time and heavy content demands and decided that the most efficient way of delivering science instruction was through traditional methods. Researchers discuss potentials and obstacles for the science community to consider in supporting teachers and preparing elementary school teachers to provide students with authentic experiential learning opportunities. We further confront teachers’ and students’ perceptions that science is always best and most efficiently learned inside the classroom through traditional text-driven instruction.

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Different countries, same science classes: Students’ experiences of school science in their own words

TL;DR: In this article, the authors compared student narratives from interpretive studies by Lindahl, by Osborne and Collins, and by Lyons, identifying core themes relating to critical contemporary issues in science education.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teaching and Learning Science Outdoors in Schools’ Immediate Surroundings at K–12 Levels: A Meta-Synthesis

TL;DR: A literature review synthesizes empirical data of 18 articles published between 2000 and 2015 about teaching and learning science outdoors from kindergarten to secondary levels (K-to-12) as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Elementary Science Education in Classrooms and Outdoors: Stakeholder Views, Gender, Ethnicity, and Testing.

TL;DR: This article explored fifth-grade students in measures of science knowledge, environmental attitudes, and outdoor comfort levels including gender and ethnic differences, and found significant differences between pre-and post-test measures along with gender and ethnicity differences with respect to students' science knowledge and environmental attitudes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Children's environmental identity and the elementary science classroom

TL;DR: The authors explored children's environmental identity by describing how fifth grade children view their relationship with the natural world alongside their experience of elementary school science and found that children recognize and describe their own environmental identity, but that identity is often unacknowledged in the science classroom.
Journal ArticleDOI

Impacts of Outdoor Environmental Education on Teacher Reports of Attention, Behavior, and Learning Outcomes for Students With Emotional, Cognitive, and Behavioral Disabilities

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined the impacts of outdoor environmental education on indicators of emotional, cognitive, and behavioral disabilities (e.g., student behavior, attention span), science efficacy, nature of science, and academic achievement for students with ECBD.
References
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Book

Qualitative Inquiry and Research Design : Choosing Among Five Approaches

TL;DR: Poth mengeksplorasi dasar filosofis, sejarah, and elemen kunci dari lima pendekatan penelitian kualitatif as mentioned in this paper.
Book ChapterDOI

From Intentions to Actions: A Theory of Planned Behavior

Icek Ajzen
TL;DR: There appears to be general agreement among social psychologists that most human behavior is goal-directed (e. g., Heider, 1958 ; Lewin, 1951), and human social behavior can best be described as following along lines of more or less well-formulated plans.
Journal ArticleDOI

Teachers’ Beliefs and Educational Research: Cleaning Up a Messy Construct:

TL;DR: The authors examines the meaning prominent researchers give to beliefs and how this meaning differs from that of knowledge, provides a definition of belief consistent with the best work in this area, and explores the nature of belief structures as outlined by key researchers.
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