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  1. Classroom Animals Provide More Than Just Science Education.Sandra Herbert & Julianne Lynch - 2017 - Science & Education 26 (1-2):107-123.
    Keeping classroom animals is a common practice in many classrooms. Their value for learning is often seen narrowly as the potential to involve children in learning biological science. They also provide opportunities for increased empathy, as well as socio-emotional development. Realization of their potential for enhancing primary children’s learning can be affected by many factors. This paper focuses on teachers’ perceptions of classroom animals, drawing on accounts and reflections provided by 19 participants located in an Australian primary school where each (...)
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  • Views from the Chalkface.Zhi Hong Wan & Siu Ling Wong - 2016 - Science & Education 25 (9-10):1089-1114.
    Although the goal of developing school students’ understanding of nature of science has long been advocated, there is still a lack of research that focuses on probing how science teachers, a kind of major stakeholder in NOS instruction, perceive the values of teaching NOS. Through semi-structured interviews, this study investigated the views of 15 Hong Kong in-service senior secondary science teachers about the values of teaching NOS. These values as perceived by the teachers fall into two types. The first type (...)
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