Publication details

A cross-cultural study on freshmens knowledge of genetics, evolution, and the nature of science

Authors

SORGO Andrej USAK Muhammet KUBIATKO Milan FANČOVIČOVÁ Jana PROKOP Pavol PUHEK Miro SKODA Jiří BAHAR Mehmet

Year of publication 2014
Type Article in Periodical
Magazine / Source Journal of Baltic Science Education
MU Faculty or unit

Faculty of Education

Citation
Field Pedagogy and education
Keywords evolution; genetics; human evolution; nature of science; non-scientific explanations
Description The purpose of this study was to measure the freshmens level of knowledge about genetics, evolution, human evolution, the nature of science, and opinions on evolution and the presence of non-scientific explanations among Czech, Slovakian, Slovenian and Turkish students. Determination of prior knowledge and pre-conceptions about these issues is important because they are filters to learning other related concepts. The results are going to be a starting point for developing teaching strategies concerning Darwinian evolution and preparing prospective science teachers for working with students in national and international contexts. A total of 994 first-year university students from the Czech Republic (276; 27.8%), Slovakia (212, 21.3%), Slovenia (217, 27.3%) and Turkey (235, 23.6%) participated in this study. The findings can be summarized as follows: knowledge especially that of the nature of science at the freshmen level was seriously flawed. Non-scientific explanations were present in high percentages. Both were regarded as barriers towards scientific reasoning and acceptance of general human evolution especially for students expressing orthodox religious beliefs.

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