Investigating Science Education
Conducting high-quality research to better understand science education.
Conducting high-quality research to better understand science education.
Investigating ‘humanity’: Reconstructing human evolution using skulls, maps, tools, and the history of science, from a group of five researchers including Lin Andrews of the National Center for Science Education, present a hands-on experience, coupled with intentional questioning strategies, that inspires students to use high-level evolutionary thinking and to begin asking excellent questions about what we know and how we know it.
Climate change education in U.S. middle schools: changes over five pivotal years, from researchers at Penn State University and NCSE, reveals a remarkable improvement in climate education in US middle schools over the past five years.
Pedagogy vs. reality: An investigation of supports and barriers when implementing NGSS storylines, a study co-authored by two NCSE staff, Lin Andrews and Blake Touchet, found that lack of administrative support, time constraints, difficulty with student sense-making, and mismatched classrooms are the largest barriers to implementation of NGSS storylines, while curriculum-based professional learning including working through the lessons from a student perspective, peer collaboration, autonomy, and flexibility were the largest predictors of successful implementation.
The acceptance of evolution: A developmental view of Generation X in the United States analyzes the acceptance or rejection of evolution using a 33-year longitudinal study that followed the same 5000 public-school students from grade 7 through midlife (ages 45–48), and is the first to do so in regard to evolution. NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch is an author of the study.
Citizen attitudes toward science and technology, 1957–2020: measurement, stability, and the Trump challenge, from a group of six researchers including NCSE Deputy Director Glenn Branch, found that Americans’ confidence in science was unshaken by the Trump administration’s attacks on scientific expertise.
Evaluating the current state of evolution acceptance instruments: a research coordination network meeting report, from a group of 16 experts including NCSE Executive Director Amanda L. Townley, reviews current evolution acceptance instruments used with undergraduate biology students and puts forth a guide to the strengths and weaknesses of these instruments.
What types of coursework prepare biology teachers to teach evolution effectively? What’s effective and ineffective in preparing high school biology educators to teach evolution?, from researchers at NCSE and Penn State University, provides answers to that question based on evidence from a nationally representative sample of public high school biology teachers in the U.S.
Climate change summit: testing the impact of role playing games on crossing the knowledge to action gap, co-authored by a researcher from the National Center for Science Education, examined role-playing activity in undergraduate science class sections to explore how role-playing affected climate change decision-making.
From The Fresh Prince to The Politician: climate change frames in American scripted television comedy 1990–2020, from a researcher at the National Center for Science Education, analyzed comedic framing of climate change in scripted television comedies and found that though television has the potential to further knowledge and action through comedies, this potential remains largely unrealized.
Communicating Climate Change Content in Small and Mid-Sized Museums: Challenges and Opportunities, from researchers at the National Center for Science Education, reviews common challenges to incorporating climate change in rural museums, along with an overview of how partnerships can overcome these barriers using theory-based science communication approaches.
Small Museums and Community Partnerships: Equity, Education, and Interpretation, from researchers at the National Center for Science Education, examines practices for effective partnerships at nine small museums.
Public acceptance of evolution in the United States, 1985–2020, from researchers at NCSE, the University of Michigan, and the University of Oviedo in Spain is based on a series of national public opinion surveys conducted over the last 35 years and finds that a majority of Americans now accept evolution.
Teaching evolution in U.S. public middle schools: results of the first national survey, from researchers at NCSE and Penn State University, is the first systematic attempt to investigate middle school evolution education through a representative survey of science teachers.
Michelle Valkanas, an NCSE 2019 Graduate Student Outreach Fellow, shared her fellowship research on strategies for effective community engagement at the 2020 Association of Science and Technology Center conference. Her poster, which explains how NCSE works with communities to make climate change and evolution accessible and relevant, garnered more than 200 views during the virtual event.
Making the Grade? How State Public School Standards Address Climate Change provides an analysis of every state's science standards when it comes to climate change. Developed by NCSE and the Texas Freedom Network Education Fund, the report has a companion website with an interactive map.
Teaching evolution in U.S. public schools: a continuing challenge details a rigorous, nationwide NCSE/Penn State survey of high school biology teachers that finds promising and significant improvements in evolution education over the past 12 years — the last time a similar study was conducted.
Mixed Messages: How Climate Change is Taught in America's Public Schools is a detailed report of the first nationwide survey of climate change education in the United States, conceived and funded by NCSE and conducted in collaboration with researchers at Pennsylvania State University.
To understand the ongoing challenges facing evolution education in the United States, it is necessary to appreciate creationist actions at the different levels of educational governance — state legislatures, state boards of education, local boards of education, and finally the individual classroom — that serve as the battlegrounds for the evolution education wars.
Evolution and Creationism in America's Classrooms: A National Portrait, the first nationally representative survey of teachers concerning the teaching of evolution, found that a majority teach the topic inaccurately or inadequately.