Matches in SemOpenAlex for { <https://semopenalex.org/work/W117117625> ?p ?o ?g. }
Showing items 1 to 85 of
85
with 100 items per page.
- W117117625 endingPage "9" @default.
- W117117625 startingPage "1" @default.
- W117117625 abstract "Le développement des connaissances en science a été étudié auprès d’enfants évoluant dans divers contextes culturels. Il a été montré que les enfants ont des difficultés à acquérir une compréhension scientifique en astronomie. Peu d’études ont porté sur la compréhension que développe l’enfant lorsque diverses explications (convergentes ou divergentes) d’un même phénomène coexistent. Dans cette étude, nous comparons les performances de 176 enfants d’école élémentaire (CP, CE2 et CM2) interrogés individuellement au sujet de la forme de la Terre et du cycle journée/nuit. Les enfants évoluent dans un contexte culturel animiste (Burkina Faso) versus mécaniste (France) et sont confrontés aux mêmes programmes scolaires. Nous montrons que les enfants de contexte culturel mécaniste développent une compréhension scientifique plus précocement que les enfants évoluant dans une culture animiste. Ainsi, la convergence des indices produits par le système scolaire et par le contexte culturel semble faciliter le développement d’une conceptualisation scientifique en astronomie.The acquisition and development of knowledge about astronomy, in particular the Earth's shape and the night-and-day cycle, have been studied in several different cultural contexts. Research has shown that children have difficulty understanding these two counterintuitive notions, and that experience, presuppositions and cultural context all play an important part in their acquisition. Nevertheless, very few studies have looked at children's understanding of astronomy when different explanations for the same phenomenon coexist. This is the case in animistic cultural contexts, where the mechanistic knowledge acquired in the classroom differs from the knowledge conveyed by the cultural context. Astronomy is taught from Grade Three in both France and Burkina Faso. As the two curricula are identical, children are exposed to the same scientific, mechanistic facts at the same point in their schooling. We therefore chose to interview elementary schoolchildren in Grades One, Three and Five in France (mechanistic cultural context) and Burkina Faso (animistic cultural context), in order to study the ontogenetic development of the Earth's shape and night-and-day concepts according to the children's cultural context. We used the same questionnaire and similar interview conditions to question all 176 children who took part in this study. We formed the following two hypotheses: (a) schooling affects the nature and development of children's scientific knowledge, in that the older they grow, the more scientific and coherent their knowledge becomes; and (b) cultural context affects the nature and development of knowledge about astronomy. We showed that there is indeed a developmental effect, regardless of cultural context. Nevertheless, the French children acquired more scientific knowledge about the Earth's shape and the night-and-day cycle than the Burkinabe children did, and that knowledge was more coherent. Our results suggest that whereas the same scientific knowledge was transmitted through schooling in both cases, the children's acquisition and development of knowledge about astronomy was influenced by their cultural context (mechanistic vs. animistic). Children growing up in a mechanistic culture therefore develop a scientific understanding of astronomy earlier than children living in an animistic context, with the convergence of accounts from school and culture apparently facilitating and enhancing their scientific conceptualization of astronomy." @default.
- W117117625 created "2016-06-24" @default.
- W117117625 creator A5028401389 @default.
- W117117625 creator A5052919755 @default.
- W117117625 date "2009-03-01" @default.
- W117117625 modified "2023-10-12" @default.
- W117117625 title "Les conceptions naïves : connaissances organisées, bases des changements conceptuels" @default.
- W117117625 cites W1571276276 @default.
- W117117625 cites W1968280575 @default.
- W117117625 cites W1969288146 @default.
- W117117625 cites W1988185853 @default.
- W117117625 cites W1989748540 @default.
- W117117625 cites W1995347610 @default.
- W117117625 cites W1995805120 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2012294286 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2046186368 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2046644772 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2047041224 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2052801332 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2064684620 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2081482698 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2085234963 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2086656818 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2120858389 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2128925394 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2137057815 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2142277700 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2146722303 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2156859360 @default.
- W117117625 cites W2161696066 @default.
- W117117625 cites W3143968289 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4232217968 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4239317076 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4239613992 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4241365093 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4244473535 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4245039395 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4245410358 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4247171405 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4253796373 @default.
- W117117625 cites W4255337044 @default.
- W117117625 doi "https://doi.org/10.1016/j.psfr.2008.09.002" @default.
- W117117625 hasPublicationYear "2009" @default.
- W117117625 type Work @default.
- W117117625 sameAs 117117625 @default.
- W117117625 citedByCount "3" @default.
- W117117625 countsByYear W1171176252015 @default.
- W117117625 countsByYear W1171176252017 @default.
- W117117625 countsByYear W1171176252020 @default.
- W117117625 crossrefType "journal-article" @default.
- W117117625 hasAuthorship W117117625A5028401389 @default.
- W117117625 hasAuthorship W117117625A5052919755 @default.
- W117117625 hasConcept C138885662 @default.
- W117117625 hasConcept C144024400 @default.
- W117117625 hasConcept C15708023 @default.
- W117117625 hasConcept C166957645 @default.
- W117117625 hasConcept C205649164 @default.
- W117117625 hasConcept C2779343474 @default.
- W117117625 hasConceptScore W117117625C138885662 @default.
- W117117625 hasConceptScore W117117625C144024400 @default.
- W117117625 hasConceptScore W117117625C15708023 @default.
- W117117625 hasConceptScore W117117625C166957645 @default.
- W117117625 hasConceptScore W117117625C205649164 @default.
- W117117625 hasConceptScore W117117625C2779343474 @default.
- W117117625 hasIssue "1" @default.
- W117117625 hasLocation W1171176251 @default.
- W117117625 hasOpenAccess W117117625 @default.
- W117117625 hasPrimaryLocation W1171176251 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W1013667899 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W11365241 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W157591366 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W1589203209 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W2557454913 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W2559405764 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W2603296253 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W2748952813 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W828925460 @default.
- W117117625 hasRelatedWork W93312527 @default.
- W117117625 hasVolume "54" @default.
- W117117625 isParatext "false" @default.
- W117117625 isRetracted "false" @default.
- W117117625 magId "117117625" @default.
- W117117625 workType "article" @default.