Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education
In considering goals for science education, it is conventional to make arguments for the utility of scientific knowledge for a variety of purposes. Less prominent are rationales based on the beauty or truth of science. In this paper, we examine how an approach to science education might be different...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1628752023-02-28T20:10:32Z Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education Tan, Michael Koh, Teck Seng School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences National Institute of Education Science::General Epistemic Practices Boundaries of Knowledge In considering goals for science education, it is conventional to make arguments for the utility of scientific knowledge for a variety of purposes. Less prominent are rationales based on the beauty or truth of science. In this paper, we examine how an approach to science education might be different if we shift the goals of communication to an appreciation of the ways in which our knowledge is limited, and how the practical boundaries of our knowledge can be closer than we think—in other words, how we are collectively ignorant. Key to this approach is a renewed understanding of the role of material investigations in providing partial knowledge. Instead of providing incontrovertible evidence, empirical investigations provide a form of “explanatory excess” whereby the appropriate choice of explanation is not necessarily one that can be simplistically determined. Although scientific practices provide techniques to minimize the possibility of error in making our conclusions, these practices are performed by fallible human communities, from which the notion of “tentative, yet durable” claims derives. We argue that public scientific literacy may be better served by more circumspect claims of validity, and crucially, an enhanced understanding of the ways in which materiality influences epistemic processes and limits our claims. We illustrate these proposals through the case of the International Young Physicists' Tournament, a contest that invites participants to play with interesting physical phenomena for over a year. We identify three factors prominent in these tournament problems that present possibilities for increasing the authenticity of practical investigations. These are (i) multiple physical interactions in phenomena leading to the openness of choice of explanatory theory; (ii) the qualitative, subjective nature of the explanatory utility of theories; and (iii) the material contingency of empirical investigations. We argue that a more open-handed embrace of the limits of our knowledge may serve as a better epistemic orientation for science instruction. Ministry of Education (MOE) Published version This study was supported by a grant from the Ministry of Education, Singapore. 2022-11-11T05:51:04Z 2022-11-11T05:51:04Z 2022 Journal Article Tan, M. & Koh, T. S. (2022). Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education. Science Education. https://dx.doi.org/10.1002/sce.21753 0036-8326 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162875 10.1002/sce.21753 2-s2.0-85133599847 en Science Education © 2022 The Authors. Science Education published by Wiley Periodicals LLC. This is an open access article under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution‐NonCommercial‐NoDerivs License, which permits use and distribution in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited, the use is non‐commercial and no modifications or adaptations are made. application/pdf |
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Science::General Epistemic Practices Boundaries of Knowledge Tan, Michael Koh, Teck Seng Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education |
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In considering goals for science education, it is conventional to make arguments for the utility of scientific knowledge for a variety of purposes. Less prominent are rationales based on the beauty or truth of science. In this paper, we examine how an approach to science education might be different if we shift the goals of communication to an appreciation of the ways in which our knowledge is limited, and how the practical boundaries of our knowledge can be closer than we think—in other words, how we are collectively ignorant. Key to this approach is a renewed understanding of the role of material investigations in providing partial knowledge. Instead of providing incontrovertible evidence, empirical investigations provide a form of “explanatory excess” whereby the appropriate choice of explanation is not necessarily one that can be simplistically determined. Although scientific practices provide techniques to minimize the possibility of error in making our conclusions, these practices are performed by fallible human communities, from which the notion of “tentative, yet durable” claims derives. We argue that public scientific literacy may be better served by more circumspect claims of validity, and crucially, an enhanced understanding of the ways in which materiality influences epistemic processes and limits our claims. We illustrate these proposals through the case of the International Young Physicists' Tournament, a contest that invites participants to play with interesting physical phenomena for over a year. We identify three factors prominent in these tournament problems that present possibilities for increasing the authenticity of practical investigations. These are (i) multiple physical interactions in phenomena leading to the openness of choice of explanatory theory; (ii) the qualitative, subjective nature of the explanatory utility of theories; and (iii) the material contingency of empirical investigations. We argue that a more open-handed embrace of the limits of our knowledge may serve as a better epistemic orientation for science instruction. |
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School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences |
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School of Physical and Mathematical Sciences Tan, Michael Koh, Teck Seng |
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Article |
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Tan, Michael Koh, Teck Seng |
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Tan, Michael |
title |
Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education |
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Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education |
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Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education |
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Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education |
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Learning to become ignorant: Improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education |
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learning to become ignorant: improving the quality of epistemic knowledge in science education |
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2022 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/162875 |
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