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El. knyga: Equity, Exclusion and Everyday Science Learning: The Experiences of Minoritised Groups

4.30/5 (17 ratings by Goodreads)
(University College London, UK)

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Science plays an important role in our societies and permeates cultural practices through the mass media, schooling and museums, as well as politics and personal decision-making. But to what extent is public or everyday science learning an educational, cultural or political resource accessible to everyone? This book presents a theoretically informed, empirically detailed analysis of how minoritised people negotiate encounters with science and everyday science learning resources in their lives. While research into everyday science learning, science communication and public engagement with science has grown over the last three decades, few studies have analysed the success of attempts to make science more public. Unlike most other research studies about science, learning and publics, which tend to focus on those already involved in or interested in specific science learning activities, this book investigates attitudes towards and experiences of a range of different public science activities from the perspectives of those considered to be science outsiders. Drawing on a qualitative, ethnographic study carried out in London, the book includes perspectives of 60 people from minority ethnic, socioeconomically disadvantaged backgrounds. Equity, Exclusion and Everyday Science Learning argues that placing equity at the heart of everyday science learning and public science practices is crucial if we wish to disrupt, rather than reproduce, social disadvantages. As such, it will be essential reading for academics, researchers and postgraduates interested in the sociology of education; adult education and lifelong learning, education studies and the sociology of science and technology.

Recenzijos

Dr. Emily Dawson provides a much-needed perspective on science education, pointing out the issues that are difficult to grasp or even see from our privileged vantage points.

Marianne Achiam, Department of Science Education, University of Copenhagen "Dr. Emily Dawson provides a much-needed perspective on science education, pointing out the issues that are difficult to grasp or even see from our privileged vantage points."

Marianne Achiam, Department of Science Education, University of Copenhagen

"Issues of equity and exclusion are vital considerations for informal science learning research, policy and practice. This book offers a powerful and much-needed analysis based, crucially, on the views and experiences of those who are usually excluded from settings such as science museums and centres due to inequalities of 'race', social class and gender. A 'must read' for anyone concerned with equity and inclusion in informal science learning"

Louise Archer, Karl Mannheim Professor of Sociology of Education, UCL Institute of Education.

"Equity, Exclusion and Everyday Science Learning is critically important for the field, and deserves attention from all - museum and science center leaders, funders, theoreticians and practitioners. Hopefully, it can help us move toward a shared understanding of what it really takes for us to become relevant to all, and to make a real difference in our communities and in the world."

Karen Wise, Informal Learning Review

List of figures
xii
Preface and acknowledgements xiii
Credits xvi
1 Introduction: exploring exclusion
1(21)
Science and society
1(3)
The research setting
4(2)
The study: an overview
6(1)
Key terms and concepts
7(5)
What is everyday science learning'?
7(2)
Describing people
9(2)
What is public? Who are the public?
11(1)
Pathways through the book
12(10)
2 Understanding exclusion
22(25)
Practice challenges: having a golden ticket
22(2)
Empirical challenges: looking outside the box
24(1)
Theoretical challenges: moving away from deficits and crusades
25(6)
(Mis) Understanding exclusion through deficits
25(3)
(Mis) Understanding inclusion as a crusade
28(3)
Understanding exclusion
31(3)
Structural inequalities and social justice
32(2)
Social reproduction and Bourdieu
34(4)
Everyday science learning and the concept of field
34(1)
Capital and everyday science learning
35(2)
Everyday science learning as habitus
37(1)
Social justice, Bourdieu and exclusion
38(1)
Summary
39(8)
3 Mapping participation
47(21)
Counting bodies, bodies that count
48(3)
Cultural consumption and everyday science learning
51(1)
Mapping (non)participation in everyday science learning practices
52(5)
Special, dominant practices
53(1)
Mundane, popular practices
54(2)
Restricted fields of everyday science learning
56(1)
Mapping participants' cultural consumption beyond science
57(4)
Summary
61(7)
4 No `taste' for science?
68(20)
Attitudes towards science
69(7)
Science in general
70(3)
Science in particular
73(2)
Being disposed against science
75(1)
Three stories about science
76(6)
Mr Bhakta's story: education, displacement and resilience
76(2)
Ibrahim's story: interests and opportunities
78(2)
Fatima's story: experiences of everyday science learning
80(2)
Learning that science is not for you
82(1)
Summary
83(5)
5 Feeling excluded
88(21)
Structural inequalities and exclusion from everyday science learning
89(7)
Embodied exclusion
89(2)
Cultural imperialism
91(2)
Powerlessness
93(3)
How participants imagined publics for everyday science learning
96(1)
Imagined museums and embodied exclusion
97(6)
Taking exclusion for granted
99(1)
Expecting exclusion from science museums
100(2)
Racism, exclusion and non-participation
102(1)
Summary
103(6)
6 Being excluded
109(21)
Excluded by design
109(1)
The economics of museum visits
110(3)
The language of exclusion: literacies and inaccessibility
113(6)
Inaccessible science learning
113(3)
Inaccessible institutions
116(3)
Encounters with staff: more hindrance than help
119(3)
Not designed for us
122(2)
Reproducing exclusion and non-participation
124(1)
Summary
125(5)
7 Transforming everyday science learning
130(25)
Dancing with natural history: trying to transform the museum
131(3)
A theory of inclusion for everyday science learning
134(6)
Understanding exclusion
135(2)
Thinking about social justice
137(2)
Three lenses for accessible, equitable practice
139(1)
An access and equity framework for everyday science learning
140(8)
Understanding and transforming infrastructure access
141(2)
Disrupting everyday science learning literacies
143(3)
Reconfiguring community acceptance
146(2)
Putting it all together
148(2)
Summary
150(5)
8 Afterword
155(12)
Disrupting and transforming science
156(1)
Racism, knowledge and research
157(2)
Beyond science: disrupting and transforming culture, education and politics
159(1)
Taking the temperature of the water: a snapshot
160(7)
Appendix: research methods 167(5)
Index 172
Emily Dawson is an Associate Professor in the Department of Science and Technology Studies at University College London. Her work focuses on how people engage with and learn about science, with an emphasis on equity, in particular the construction of publics and non publics for science, and the role of privilege in such processes.