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Visualizing the invisible: class excursions to ignite children's enthusiasm for microbes
- Source :
- McGenity , T J , Gessesse , A , Hallsworth , J E , Garcia Cela , E , Verheecke-Vaessen , C , Wang , F , Chavarría , M , Haggblom , M M , Molin , S , Danchin , A , Smid , E J , Lood , C , Cockell , C S , Whitby , C , Liu , S-J , Keller , N P , Stein , L Y , Bordenstein , S R , Lal , R , Nunes , O C , Gram , L , Singh , B K , Webster , N S , Morris , C , Sivinski , S , Bindschedler , S , Junier , P , Antunes , A , Baxter , B K , Scavone , P & Timmis , K 2020 , ' Visualizing the invisible: class excursions to ignite children's enthusiasm for microbes ' , Microbial Biotechnology , vol. 13 , no. 4 , pp. 844-887 .
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- We have recently argued that, because microbes have pervasive - often vital - influences on our lives, and that therefore their roles must be taken into account in many of the decisions we face, society must become microbiology-literate, through the introduction of relevant microbiology topics in school curricula (Timmis et al. 2019. Environ Microbiol 21: 1513-1528). The current coronavirus pandemic is a stark example of why microbiology literacy is such a crucial enabler of informed policy decisions, particularly those involving preparedness of public-health systems for disease outbreaks and pandemics. However, a significant barrier to attaining widespread appreciation of microbial contributions to our well-being and that of the planet is the fact that microbes are seldom visible: most people are only peripherally aware of them, except when they fall ill with an infection. And it is disease, rather than all of the positive activities mediated by microbes, that colours public perception of 'germs' and endows them with their poor image. It is imperative to render microbes visible, to give them life and form for children (and adults), and to counter prevalent misconceptions, through exposure to imagination-capturing images of microbes and examples of their beneficial outputs, accompanied by a balanced narrative. This will engender automatic mental associations between everyday information inputs, as well as visual, olfactory and tactile experiences, on the one hand, and the responsible microbes/microbial communities, on the other hand. Such associations, in turn, will promote awareness of microbes and of the many positive and vital consequences of their actions, and facilitate and encourage incorporation of such consequences into relevant decision-making processes. While teaching microbiology topics in primary and secondary school is key to this objective, a strategic programme to expose children directly and personally to natural and managed microbial processes, and
Details
- Database :
- OAIster
- Journal :
- McGenity , T J , Gessesse , A , Hallsworth , J E , Garcia Cela , E , Verheecke-Vaessen , C , Wang , F , Chavarría , M , Haggblom , M M , Molin , S , Danchin , A , Smid , E J , Lood , C , Cockell , C S , Whitby , C , Liu , S-J , Keller , N P , Stein , L Y , Bordenstein , S R , Lal , R , Nunes , O C , Gram , L , Singh , B K , Webster , N S , Morris , C , Sivinski , S , Bindschedler , S , Junier , P , Antunes , A , Baxter , B K , Scavone , P & Timmis , K 2020 , ' Visualizing the invisible: class excursions to ignite children's enthusiasm for microbes ' , Microbial Biotechnology , vol. 13 , no. 4 , pp. 844-887 .
- Notes :
- application/pdf, English
- Publication Type :
- Electronic Resource
- Accession number :
- edsoai.on1178793603
- Document Type :
- Electronic Resource