Peer-Reviewed Journal Details
Mandatory Fields
Butler, J,Simmie, GM,O'Grady, A
2015
July
European Journal Of Teacher Education
An investigation into the prevalence of ecological misconceptions in upper secondary students and implications for pre-service teacher education
Published
()
Optional Fields
ecology pre-service teachers misconceptions secondary HIGH-SCHOOL STUDENTS JUNIOR-HIGH-SCHOOL CLIMATE-CHANGE SCIENCE KNOWLEDGE IDENTIFICATION CHILDREN IDEAS
38
300
319
Students' and teachers' misconceptions are an international concern among researchers in science education; they influence how students learn and teachers' teach knowledge and are a hindrance in the acquisition of accurate knowledge. This paper reports on a literature synthesis of existing research about ecological misconceptions. One means of improving the application of misconceptions involves using diagnostic tests. These form an important component of a broader conceptual toolkit needed to teach science in conceptually accurate ways. Analysis of the results of a diagnostic test, completed by biology students and pre-service teachers in Ireland, revealed the presence of an unacceptably high level of misconceptions and uncovered flaws in students and teachers' understanding of ecological concepts. A clear link was observed between the misconceptions present in pre-service teachers' knowledge base and those dominant in students. In this regard, we discuss implications of these findings for teacher education, from pre-service to continuing education.
10.1080/02619768.2014.943394
Grant Details