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Journal ArticleDOI

Small Groups' Ecological Reasoning While Making an Environmental Management Decision.

Kathleen Hogan
- 01 Apr 2002 - 
- Vol. 39, Iss: 4, pp 341-368
TLDR
This paper explored the ideas and reasoning students use to make a collaborative environmental management decision and found that students' discussions were compared with scientists' guidelines for making environmental management decisions, and with one expert's analysis of the particular management scenario the students considered.
Abstract
The objective of this study was to explore the ideas and reasoning students use to make a collaborative environmental management decision. Eight groups of 8th-grade students (n = 24) considered ecological and economic information about an invasive aquatic species to make a management recommendation. In addition to discussing the exact information they were given, the groups made a variety of interpretations, elaborations, and inferences concerning ecological structure and dynamics and practical aspects of the management scenario. Value judgments and concerns with uncertainty also appeared in students' discussions, to differing degrees. The students' discussions were compared with scientists' guidelines for making environmental management decisions, and with one expert's analysis of the particular management scenario the students considered. A major finding was that whereas across groups students touched on all of the themes that scientists consider to be important for making environmental management decisions, within most groups students focused more narrowly on particular themes, giving cursory treatment to other dimensions of the problem. The results point to a need to foster students' ecological background knowledge and integrative, systems thinking skills for making principled decisions about complex environmental issues. © 2002 Wiley Periodicals Inc. J Res Sci Teach 39: 341–368, 2002

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Journal ArticleDOI

Informal reasoning regarding socioscientific issues: A critical review of research

TL;DR: A critical review of research related to informal reasoning regarding socioscientific issues can be found in this article, where the authors discuss the relationship between nature of science conceptualizations and socio-scientific decision making.

Promoting Self-Regulation in Science Education: Metacognition as Part of a Broader Perspective on Learning

TL;DR: Gunstone et al. as discussed by the authors reviewed recent research on self-regulated learning and discuss the implications of this research for science education, focusing on three components of selfregulated learning including cognition, metacognition, and motivation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beyond STS: A research‐based framework for socioscientific issues education

TL;DR: The authors describe a research-based framework of current research and practice that identifies factors associated with reasoning about socioscientific issues and provide a working model that illustrates theoretical and conceptual links among key psychological, sociological, and developmental factors central to SSI and science education.
Journal ArticleDOI

Promoting self-regulation in science education: Metacognition as part of a broader perspective on learning

TL;DR: Gunstone et al. as discussed by the authors reviewed recent research on self-regulated learning and discuss the implications of this research for science education, focusing on three components of selfregulated learning including cognition, metacognition, and motivation.
Journal ArticleDOI

Patterns of Informal Reasoning in the Context of Socioscientific Decision Making.

TL;DR: This paper explored how individuals negotiate and resolve genetic engineering dilemmas and found that rationalistic, emotive, and intuitive forms of informal reasoning were typically interwoven within an overall pattern of reasoning.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

The value of the world's ecosystem services and natural capital

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors have estimated the current economic value of 17 ecosystem services for 16 biomes, based on published studies and a few original calculations, for the entire biosphere, the value (most of which is outside the market) is estimated to be in the range of US$16-54 trillion (10^(12)) per year, with an average of US $33 trillion per year.
Book

Mind in society

Journal ArticleDOI

Biotic invasions: causes, epidemiology, global consequences, and control

TL;DR: Given their current scale, biotic invasions have taken their place alongside human-driven atmospheric and oceanic alterations as major agents of global change and left unchecked, they will influence these other forces in profound but still unpredictable ways.
Book ChapterDOI

Transactive Memory: A Contemporary Analysis of the Group Mind

TL;DR: The most influential theory of group behavior that has ever been developed is currently in disfavor as discussed by the authors, which is the theory of the group mind, and it became so widely used in the 19th and early 20th centuries that almost every early social theorist who contributed to modern social psychology held a similar view.
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