A STUDY OF TEACHING TECHNIQUE TOWARDS TALENT AND TEACHING STYLES

Gitanjali Mishra, Ashwin Hardiya

Abstract


A demographic examination separated by a teaching position provides a possible insight into the results of this study. These demographics are shown separately by teaching positions. Among elementary science teachers, primary non-science teachers and high school nonscience teachers, the highest proportion of evangelicals and weekly church participants is seen. These groups were also less supportive of incorporating scientific ideas into the curriculum. Similar results were seen for those who identified themselves as Republicans and Conservatives. Among the same three groups, the highest proportions for these political factors were seen. It is plausible that views on religion and politics can be linked to the individual's chosen careers. The population of the area in which the educator lives, however, is not likely to be directly related to the career path. The survey revealed that larger proportions of primary and secondary school teachers lived in rural areas. There were largely unexpected results from the aspects of this study that addressed content knowledge. These results are visible. Secondary school science teachers were noticeably higher in the group of people who had taken or more science classes. Compared to the other SSI, the self-reported understanding of development was higher for all groups. Most secondary and secondary school teachers described their understanding of evolution as above average. For the two secondary groups, this was the highest, but five of the seven teaching posts were over 50 percent. For high school teachers from stem cell research, the only group that felt that they mostly had an above average understanding (52.5 percent).


Keywords


demographic, examination, Teaching Technique, talent.

Full Text:

PDF

References


Kara, Y. (2021). Pre-service biology teachers’ perceptions on the instruction of socioscientific Issues in the curriculum.European Journal of Teacher Education,35(1), 111129.

Kilinç, A. (2021). Projeye dayali ögrenme boslugu kapatabilir mi? Türk fen ögretmen adaylari, & çevre dostu davranislar. International Journal of Environmental and Science Education, 5(4), 495-509.

Kilinç, A., Boyes, E., & Stanisstreet, M. (2021). Turkish school students and global warming: Beliefs and willingness to act. Eurasia Journal of Mathematics, Science, & Technology Education, 7(2), 121-134.

Kilinç, A., Boyes, E., & Stanisstreet, M. (2021). Exploring students’ ideas about risks and benefits of nuclear power using risk perception theories. Journal of Science Education and Technology, 22(3), 252-266.

Klosterman, M. L., & Sadler, T. D. (2021). Multiple assessment of scientific content knowledge gains associated with socio scientific issues based instruction. International Journal of Science Education, 32, 1017-1043. Kolstø, S. D. (2021) Scientific literacy for citizenship: Tools for dealing with the science dimension of controversial SSI. Science Education, 85, 291–310.

Kolstø, S. D. (2021) Patterns in students’ argumentation confronted with a risk-focused socio-scientific issue. International Journal of Science Education, 28(14), 1689– 1716.

Kortland, K. (2021). An STS scenario study about students’ decision making on the waste issue. Science Education, 80, 673–689.

Kutluca, A. Y. (2021). Fen ve teknoloji ögretmen adaylarinin klonlamaya iliskin bilimsel ve sosyobilimsel argümantasyon kalitelerinin alan bilgisi yönünden incelenmesi (Yüksek lisans tezi, Abant Izzet Baysal Üniversitesi, Bolu). http:// tez2.yok.gov.tr/ adresinden edinilmistir. Lee, H., Abd-EI-Khalick, F., & Choi, K. (2021). Korean science teachers’


Refbacks

  • There are currently no refbacks.


Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International License.

Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies
ISSN 1305-578X (Online)
Copyright © 2005-2022 by Journal of Language and Linguistic Studies