Evolution Education: Seeing the Forest for the Trees and Focusing Our Efforts on the Teaching of Evolution |
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Authors: | Nate K. McVaugh Jeffrey Birchfield Margaret M. Lucero Anthony J. Petrosino |
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Affiliation: | (1) Department of Educational Psychology, Learning, Cognition, and Instruction, University of Texas at Austin, 1 University Station D5700, Austin, TX 78712, USA; |
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Abstract: | Evolution is the underlying framework upon which all biology is based; however, when it comes to learning evolutionary concepts, many students encounter obstacles. There are many reasons as to why these obstacles occur. These reasons deal with evolution being treated as a discrete topic among many within a biology curriculum, misunderstanding the nature of science, and personal difficulties with understanding due to evolution’s seemingly abstract nature. In this article, we propose a different way of thinking about and teaching evolution in grades K-12, and it surrounds four core areas essential to the understanding of evolution: variation, selection, inheritance, and deep time. Possibilities for how these areas can affect learning are described and implications for assessment are also discussed. |
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