APS April Meeting 2015
Volume 60, Number 4
Saturday–Tuesday, April 11–14, 2015;
Baltimore, Maryland
Session H8: Invited Session: Moving Astronomy Education Research Results into Teaching
8:30 AM–10:18 AM,
Sunday, April 12, 2015
Room: Key 4
Sponsoring
Unit:
FEd
Chair: Tim Slater, University of Wyoming
Abstract ID: BAPS.2015.APR.H8.3
Abstract: H8.00003 : A new international agenda for astronomy education research
9:42 AM–10:18 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Paulo Bretones
(Universidade Federal de S\~ao Carlos)
A good deal of the research on astronomy education is based on comprehensive
summary reviews of scholarly production revealing trends and gaps in the
area. Motivated by the recent reform of the IAU Commission Reform, we are
proposing projects related to the Commission 46 and more specifically to the
Working Group on Theory and Methods in Astronomy Education. The goal of this
work is to present a new international agenda for research on astronomy
education. In a general way we intend to encourage efforts to increase the
scholarly production in the area and, at the same time, encourage summary
reviews of what has been published in several regions of the globe. These
reviews refer to the various forms of production of this research, published
in theses dissertations, conference proceedings and journal articles. We
believe that there is already sufficient production and the more complete
surveys must reveal a ``hidden'' material that may be available locally and
internationally. Much of the work in these venues is certainly not known by
researchers in Astronomy, not only because they belong to a different area
of theoretical and methodological framework, but also because they are
related to teaching in Physics and general sciences, rather than Astronomy
specifically. This kind of research is largely invisible because it occurs
in very specific different contexts of production, culture, curriculum,
materials and application in schools with local teachers and the general
public. To improve the present situation, international events are proposed
in various continents seeking to encourage surveys of already published
materials, their studies and seeking also new key lines of research. As
concrete examples, scholarly reviews and studies conducted in Brazil and
other countries are shown. We believe that such actions should raise the
visibility of authors and institutions and enable studies of
state-of-the-art showing trends and gaps, allowing future developments and
collaborations.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2015.APR.H8.3