The gateway science: A review of astronomy in the OECD school curricula, including China and South Africa
Authors
Saeed Salimpour
Sophie Bartlett
Michael T. Fitzgerald, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
David H. McKinnon, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
K. Ross Cutts, Edith Cowan University
C. Renee James
Scott Miller
Lena Danaia
Robert P. Hollow
Sergio Cabezon
Michel Faye
Akihiko Tomita
Charles Max
Michael de Korte
Cyrille Baudouin
Daina Birkenbauma
Maria Kallery
Sara Anjos
Qixuan Wu
Hye-eun Chu
Eileen Slater, Edith Cowan UniversityFollow
Amelia Ortiz-Gil
Document Type
Journal Article
Publication Title
Research in Science Education
Publisher
Springer
School
School of Education / Edith Cowan Institute for Education Research
RAS ID
30927
Funders
Dr. Michael Fitzgerald is the recipient of an Australian Research Council Discovery Early Career Award (project number DE180100682) funded by the Australian Government.
Grant Number
ARC Number : DE180100682
Abstract
Astronomy is considered by many to be a gateway science owing to its ability to inspire curiosity in everyone irrespective of age, culture, or general inclination towards science. Currently, where there is a global push to get more students engaged in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics, astronomy provides an invaluable conduit to achieve this shift. This paper highlights the results of a study which has reviewed the presence and extent to which astronomy has been incorporated into the school curriculum of the Organisation for Economic and Cooperative Development (OECD) member countries. In addition, two others strong in astronomy research, China and South Africa, are included together with the International Baccalaureate Diploma science curriculum. A total of 52 curricula from 37 countries were reviewed. The results reveal that astronomy and its related topics are prevalent in at least one grade in all curricula. Of the 52 curricula, 44 of them had astronomy-related topics in grade 6, 40 introduced astronomy-related topics in grade 1, whilst 14 had astronomy-related topics explicitly mentioned in all grades. At all year levels, celestial motion is the dominant content area; however, topics such as stars, physics, cosmology, and planetary science become much more frequent as a proportion towards the higher year levels. The most common keywords employed in the curricula related to basic astronomy concepts were the Earth, Sun, Moon, and stars, all with a high frequency of use. There is hardly any focus on Indigenous Astronomy or the role of prominent women astronomers. Relational textual analysis using Leximancer revealed that all the major concepts could be encompassed within two broad themes: Earth and Physics. Astronomy and Physics are often seen as different domains, with astronomy content being more facts based, than based on concepts...
DOI
10.1007/s11165-020-09922-0
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Comments
Salimpour, S., Bartlett, S., Fitzgerald, M. T., McKinnon, D. H., Cutts, K. R., James, C. R., ... & Faye, M. (2020). The Gateway Science: a Review of Astronomy in the OECD School Curricula, Including China and South Africa. Research in Science Education, 1-22. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11165-020-09922-0