Artículos de revistas
Charles Darwin goes to school: the role of cartoons and narrative in setting science in an historical context
Fecha
2009Registro en:
JOURNAL OF BIOLOGICAL EDUCATION, v.43, n.4, p.175-180, 2009
0021-9266
Autor
SILVA, Paulo Roberto Costa da
CORREIA, Paulo Rogerio Miranda
INFANTE-MALACHIAS, Maria Elena
Institución
Resumen
Science education is under revision. Recent changes in society require changes in education to respond to new demands. Scientific literacy can be considered a new goal of science education and the epistemological gap between natural sciences and literacy disciplines must be overcome. The history of science is a possible bridge to link these `two cultures` and to foster an interdisciplinary approach in the classroom. This paper acknowledges Darwin`s legacy and proposes the use of cartoons and narrative expositions to put this interesting chapter of science into its historical context. A five-lesson didactic sequence was developed to tell part of the story of Darwin`s expedition through South America for students from 10 to 12 years of age. Beyond geological and biological perspectives, the inclusion of historical, social and geographical facts demonstrated the beauty and complexity of the findings that Darwin employed to propose the theory of evolution.