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Biomedical Engineering Topics In High School Science Instruction: Initial Development And Field Studies
Author(s) -
Robert D. Sherwood,
Stacy Klein-Gardner
Publication year - 2020
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
DOI - 10.18260/1-2--12641
Subject(s) - field (mathematics) , computer science , mathematics education , engineering physics , engineering ethics , data science , engineering , psychology , mathematics , pure mathematics
The growth of the influence of cognitive science on the design of instructional materials in science and mathematics has been substantial over the past twenty years. Early works such as Bransford, Sherwood, Vye and Reiser summarized research on teaching thinking and problem solving pointing out important differences between the organization of knowledge by experts versus novices in classical problem solving domains such as chess as well as in physics. Another important area highlighted by Bransford, et al. was the experimental evidence that while students may have acquired knowledge in previous learning it is not always accessed when needed. This inability to access applicable knowledge in a wide variety of domains was mentioned as early as Whitehead who used the term “inert knowledge” to describe this type of knowledge. Additional work seemed to indicate that traditional educational methods tended to produce knowledge that remained inert.

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