Why do we only follow people who think like us on social media? Why is this dangerous? What are the risks of having a high IQ in science? Why do ‘flat earthers’ still exist? Why doesn’t scientific evidence always change how people think? Why are fake facts winning in the media? Moreover, why is this relevant to university science students? No one teaches us the foundational elements about how to think like a high quality scientist. Our university science students are often expected to osmotically absorb this knowledge as they spend their time remembering disciplinary facts and theories. An article in New Scientist (2019, No3218) shows that this is not good enough to prevent flawed thinking or ‘stupidity’. This course makes explicit to first...
Reasoning and decision making are error prone. This is often attributed to a fast, phylogenetically ...
Fake news, faulty data, and questionable research outputs: how do we find the truth when so much inf...
This paper investigates how citizens of five European countries (Italy, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, ...
Scientific thinking is more than just critical thinking. Teaching the full range of ways to think li...
Human beings, as a species, are capable of both incredible scientific and technical achievements, bu...
In EISTA03 the authors described an ambitious project they have embarked upon at the University of C...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
Science and technology have been incredibly success¬ful in purely technical terms. For instance, int...
“Research shows that by doing this, you’ll look and feel more beautiful, improve your health and hap...
As an afterschool STEM mentor for the New York Academy of Sciences (NYAS), each year I introduce mys...
This research studies the critical thinking skills of six teenagers in their final years of high sch...
The replication crisis in the social, behavioural and life sciences has spurred a reform movement ai...
The science education literature suggests that the public and students often hold narrow stereotypic...
MSc student Denise Baron reflects on Professor Richard Nisbett’s talk “Culture and Intelligence” and...
Public discussions of science are often marred by two pernicious phenomena: a widespread rejection o...
Reasoning and decision making are error prone. This is often attributed to a fast, phylogenetically ...
Fake news, faulty data, and questionable research outputs: how do we find the truth when so much inf...
This paper investigates how citizens of five European countries (Italy, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, ...
Scientific thinking is more than just critical thinking. Teaching the full range of ways to think li...
Human beings, as a species, are capable of both incredible scientific and technical achievements, bu...
In EISTA03 the authors described an ambitious project they have embarked upon at the University of C...
This book is available as open access through the Bloomsbury Open Access programme and is available ...
Science and technology have been incredibly success¬ful in purely technical terms. For instance, int...
“Research shows that by doing this, you’ll look and feel more beautiful, improve your health and hap...
As an afterschool STEM mentor for the New York Academy of Sciences (NYAS), each year I introduce mys...
This research studies the critical thinking skills of six teenagers in their final years of high sch...
The replication crisis in the social, behavioural and life sciences has spurred a reform movement ai...
The science education literature suggests that the public and students often hold narrow stereotypic...
MSc student Denise Baron reflects on Professor Richard Nisbett’s talk “Culture and Intelligence” and...
Public discussions of science are often marred by two pernicious phenomena: a widespread rejection o...
Reasoning and decision making are error prone. This is often attributed to a fast, phylogenetically ...
Fake news, faulty data, and questionable research outputs: how do we find the truth when so much inf...
This paper investigates how citizens of five European countries (Italy, Poland, Portugal, Slovakia, ...