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1 January 2010 Using a 17th-Century Experiment as a Gateway to Critical Assessment of Scientific Reports
Michael Shodell
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Abstract

It is certainly widely appreciated that there is much to be gained in the fertile crosstalk between science and history — whether bringing a historical perspective into the science classroom Wieder, 2006) or a scientific perspective to the study of history (McElvaine, 2002; Smail, 2008). Perhaps the major impetus for using history in teaching science has been to better transmit a sense of how science actually gets done (Conant, 1948; Johnson, 1996). I describe a different approach: using historical materials not from a history-of-science perspective but in actively developing students' analytical abilities with respect to scientific experiment and current scientific reports.

©2010 by National Association of Biology Teachers. All rights reserved. Request permission to photocopy or reproduce article content at the University of California Press's Rights and Permissions Web site at www.ucpressjournals.com/reprintinfo.asp.
Michael Shodell "Using a 17th-Century Experiment as a Gateway to Critical Assessment of Scientific Reports," The American Biology Teacher 72(1), 16-19, (1 January 2010). https://doi.org/10.1525/abt.2010.72.1.5
Published: 1 January 2010
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KEYWORDS
biology teaching
critical analysis
Scientific reports
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