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Evolution in European and Israeli School Curricula -- A Comparative Analysis

Authors :
Evangelia Mavrikaki
Giulia Realdon
Tuomas Aivelo
Ani Bajrami
Çiçek Dilek Bakanay
Anna Beniermann
Jelena Blagojevic
Egle Butkeviciene
Bento Cavadas
Costantina Cossu
Dragana Cvetkovic
Szymon M. Drobniak
Zelal Özgür Durmus
Radka Marta Dvoráková
Marcel Eens
Esra Eret
Seckin Eroglu
Malgorzata Anna Gazda
Martha Georgiou
Neil J. Gostling
Tanja Gregorcic
Vanda Janštová
Tania Jenkins
Anttoni Kervinen
Konstantinos Korfiatis
Paul Kuschmierz
Ádám Z. Lendvai
Joelyn de Lima
Fundime Miri
Teresa Nogueira
Andreas Panayides
Sylvia Paolucci
Penelope Papadopoulou
Patrícia Pessoa
Rianne Pinxten
Joana Rios Rocha
Andrea Fernández Sánchez
Merav Siani
Elvisa Sokoli
Bruno Sousa
Panagiotis K. Stasinakis
Gregor Torkar
Asta Valackiene
Máté Varga
Lucía Vázquez Ben
Anat Yarden
Xana Sá-Pinto
Source :
International Journal of Science Education. 2024 46(15):1623-1649.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The contribution of school curricula to public understanding and acceptance of evolution is still mostly unknown, due to the scarcity of studies that compare the learning goals present in different curricula. To overcome this lack of data we analysed 19 school curricula (18 European and one from Israel) to study the differences regarding the inclusion of learning goals targeting evolution understanding. We performed a quantitative content analysis using the Framework for the Assessment of school Curricula on the presence of Evolutionary concepts (FACE). For each country/region we analysed what this educational system considered the minimum evolution education a citizen should get. Our results reveal that: (i) the curricula include less than half of the learning goals considered important for scientific literacy in evolution; (ii) the most frequent learning goals address basic knowledge of evolution; (iii) learning goals related with the processes that drive evolution are often not included or rarely mentioned; (iv) evolution is most often not linked to its applications in everyday life. These results highlight the need to rethink evolution education across Europe.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0950-0693 and 1464-5289
Volume :
46
Issue :
15
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
International Journal of Science Education
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1440368
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Research
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/09500693.2023.2293090