Findings from a quasi-experimental study of children’s ideas about the solar system and how these ideas changed in response to a 10-week intervention period of formal astronomy teaching at a single primary school in England are presented in detail. Initial interviews with all of the 9- to 11-year-olds involved revealed a relatively poorly developed prior knowledge base, and this was reflected in the predominantly intuitive and transitional nature of the different mental models expressed and used when answering questions and completing tasks. Following intervention, progression was evident in many different forms and this could be described and measured both qualitatively and quantitatively. The routes and pathways toward scientific conceptu...
The aim of this research was to investigate how the use of visualisation techniques can enhance the ...
A large body of research has examined how children enter the science classroom with previously forme...
Graduation date: 1998A large body of research has examined how children enter the science classroom\...
Findings from a quasi-experimental study of children's ideas about the solar system and how these id...
The research presented here, a quasi-experimental study of knowledge acquisition and concept learnin...
The development of children's cosmologies was investigated over a 13-year period, using multi-modal,...
Children’s ideas about the Earth in space have been of interest to science educators and cognitive p...
Children attending planetarium programmes at Auckland Observatory were surveyed about their views on...
The development of children’s cosmologies was investigated over a 13‐year period, using multi‐modal,...
The debate about the nature of children's intuitive knowledge in various domains of science continue...
We investigated whether prompting children to think counterfactually when learning a complex science...
The teaching of science in primary education has, at least according to the behaviourist tradition, ...
This study describes the process of defining a hypothetical learning progression (LP) for astronomy ...
Children who visited Auckland Observatory and Stardome Planetarium in 1998 were surveyed on their id...
Research into children's understanding of the earth and phenomena such as the gravity and the day-ni...
The aim of this research was to investigate how the use of visualisation techniques can enhance the ...
A large body of research has examined how children enter the science classroom with previously forme...
Graduation date: 1998A large body of research has examined how children enter the science classroom\...
Findings from a quasi-experimental study of children's ideas about the solar system and how these id...
The research presented here, a quasi-experimental study of knowledge acquisition and concept learnin...
The development of children's cosmologies was investigated over a 13-year period, using multi-modal,...
Children’s ideas about the Earth in space have been of interest to science educators and cognitive p...
Children attending planetarium programmes at Auckland Observatory were surveyed about their views on...
The development of children’s cosmologies was investigated over a 13‐year period, using multi‐modal,...
The debate about the nature of children's intuitive knowledge in various domains of science continue...
We investigated whether prompting children to think counterfactually when learning a complex science...
The teaching of science in primary education has, at least according to the behaviourist tradition, ...
This study describes the process of defining a hypothetical learning progression (LP) for astronomy ...
Children who visited Auckland Observatory and Stardome Planetarium in 1998 were surveyed on their id...
Research into children's understanding of the earth and phenomena such as the gravity and the day-ni...
The aim of this research was to investigate how the use of visualisation techniques can enhance the ...
A large body of research has examined how children enter the science classroom with previously forme...
Graduation date: 1998A large body of research has examined how children enter the science classroom\...