Some Socio‐cultural Factors Militating against Drift towards Science and Technology in Secondary Schools
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Research in Science & Technological Education
- Vol. 7 (2) , 141-151
- https://doi.org/10.1080/0263514890070203
Abstract
Although it is a truism that the natural sciences do transcend cultural and national boundaries, the issue of the effect of culture on the teaching and learning of science continues to preoccupy the minds of researchers. The learning of the natural sciences calls into question, very often, beliefs and practices that are part of the contemporary culture in an environment. Within our own culture and other non‐Western environments, the effects of socio‐cultural factors seem to exert a very strong effect on the learning and teaching of science. This study was carried out to ascertain what socio‐cultural factors within our environment militate against the learning and teaching of science in the secondary school. A 30‐item Socio‐Cultural Environment Scale (SCES) was developed and used to collect the data in the study. The instrument has a reliability of 0#lb92. Class four and five secondary school students (470 boys, 237 girls, totalling 707) of biology, chemistry and physics from eight randomly selected secondary schools in eight states of Nigeria formed the sample of the study. The analysis of the data indicated that socio‐cultural factors such as authoritarianism, goal structure, the African world‐view, societal expectation and sacredness of science have significant effects on the learning of science. Based on these results, implications and recommendations to science teachers and science teaching have been outlined.Keywords
This publication has 9 references indexed in Scilit:
- Conceptions of traditional cosmological ideas among literate and nonliterate NigeriansJournal of Research in Science Teaching, 1987
- Relationships Among Anxiety, Belief System, and CreativityThe Journal of Social Psychology, 1986
- In search of a more effective interaction pattern in biology laboratoriesJournal of Biological Education, 1984
- The effects of ecocultural factors in operational thought among some Nigerian adolescentsJournal of Research in Science Teaching, 1982
- Science Education: an Anthropological ViewpointStudies in Science Education, 1981
- The Introduction of Heurism into JapanHistory of Education, 1978
- Three groups of skills essential for science teachersCambridge Journal of Education, 1977
- The new transformation of science educationScience Education, 1977
- Curriculum Innovations and Traditional Culture: A Case History of KenyaComparative Education, 1975