Science, Culture and Citizenship: Cross-Cultural Science Education
Abstract
My paper has three purposes: (1) to explore an alternative to the conventional mono-cultural science curriculum in schools narrowly defined by Eurocentric science; (2) to consider the benefits that accrue from a school science curriculum that recognizes the knowledge of nature held by an Indigenous culture as being foundational to understanding the physical world; and (3) to illustrate this cross-cultural school science by what we are accomplishing in Saskatchewan, Canada. From an anthropological perspective, science can be seen as anchored in Euro-American cultures (i.e., Eurocentric science), regardless of the cultural identities of non-Euro-American professional scientists. The vast majority of students experience school science as a foreign culture, but their teachers do not treat it that way. Culture clashes for socially marginalized students in society (e.g., Indigenous students) are particularly pronounced. Conventional school science discriminates against their culture’s way of knowing nature and alienates many of them in science classrooms. A cross-cultural school science, on the other hand, does not accept the hegemony of Eurocentrism, but instead seeks ethical, social, ecological, and economic rewards for all students and citizens as a consequence to implementing a cross-cultural curriculum that recognizes Indigenous knowledge as being foundational to understanding nature.In the province of Saskatchewan, Canada, we are implementing a science curriculum that introduces some Indigenous knowledge of nature into conventional school science. The provincial school science curriculum is now a pluralistic curriculum that stipulates content to be studied from two knowledge systems (Eurocentric and Indigenous). Eurocentric-Indigenous, cross-cultural, science curricula need to be developed in countries with a history of colonization. Implementation involves science teachers who build cultural bridges between their Eurocentric science culture and a local Indigenous culture.Downloads
Download data is not yet available.
Downloads
Published
2011-02-12
How to Cite
Aikenhead, G. S., & Lima, K. E. C. (2011). Science, Culture and Citizenship: Cross-Cultural Science Education. Brazilian Journal of Research in Science Education, 9(3). Retrieved from https://periodicos.ufmg.br/index.php/rbpec/article/view/3998
Issue
Section
Artigos
License
The authors are responsible for the veracity of the information provided and for the content of the papers.
The authors who publish in this journal fully agree with the following terms:
- The authors attest that the work is unpublished, that is, it has not been published in another journal, event notices or equivalent.
- The authors attest that they did not submit the paper to another journal simultaneously.
- The authors retain the copyright and grant to RPBEC the right of first publication, with the work licensed simultaneously under a Creative Commons Attribution License, which allows the sharing of the work with acknowledgment of authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- The authors attest that they own the copyright or the written permission from copyright owners of figures, tables, large texts, etc. that are included in the paper.
- Authors are authorized to take additional contracts separately, for non-exclusive distribution of the version of the work published in this journal (for example, to publish in institutional repository or as a book chapter), with acknowledgment of authorship and initial publication in this journal.
- Authors are permitted and encouraged to post their work online (e.g., in institutional repositories or on their website) after the publication in order to increase the impact and citation of published work.
In case of identification of plagiarism, inappropriate republishing and simultaneous submissions, the authors authorize the Editorial Board to make public what happened, informing the editors of the journals involved, any plagiarized authors and their institutions of origin.