info:eu-repo/semantics/article
Taking Biodiversity to School: Systematics, Evolutionary Biology, and the Nature of Science
Fecha
2014-05Registro en:
Crisci, Jorge Victor; Katinas, Liliana; McInerney, Joseph D.; Apodaca, María José; Taking Biodiversity to School: Systematics, Evolutionary Biology, and the Nature of Science; American Society of Plant Taxonomists; Systematic Botany; 39; 3; 5-2014; 667-680
0363-6445
CONICET Digital
CONICET
Autor
Crisci, Jorge Victor
Katinas, Liliana
McInerney, Joseph D.
Apodaca, María José
Resumen
A concept map for taking biodiversity to school is proposed here using a novel approach that combines systematics, evolutionary biology, and the nature of science. The concept map is tied to the recently published next generation science standards (NGSS). The problem of biodiversity is presented as a way to justify the need to take it to school. Biological classification is presented as a hypothesis about order in nature that is based on the evolutionary history of the organisms. Classification is the reference system of the entirety of biology with predictive and explanatory power. Homology is the concept that connects systematics to evolutionary biology. Evolutionary biology explains and systematics reflects the unity and diversity of life.