Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory Study

Children from southern and northern Brazil have a basic knowledge of plants, which they observe during their everyday life. Children ages between 3 to 10 years old (kindergarten & primary school), but the majority of them in the age group of 4-5 (total 145) were asked to draw what they think...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Amauri Betini Bartoszeck*, Claudete Rosa Cosmo, Bernadete Rocha daSilva, Sue Dale Tunnicliffe
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: RU Publications 2015-07-01
Series:European Journal of Educational Research
Subjects:
Online Access: http://eu-jer.com/http://www.eu-jer.com/EU-JER_4_3_105_Bartoszeck_etal.pdf
id doaj-9ec5bb7212004f73bdc696ce148de6a7
record_format Article
spelling doaj-9ec5bb7212004f73bdc696ce148de6a72020-11-24T21:26:41ZengRU PublicationsEuropean Journal of Educational Research 2165-87142165-87142015-07-014310511710.12973/eu-jer.4.3.10511884Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory StudyAmauri Betini Bartoszeck*0Claudete Rosa Cosmo1Bernadete Rocha daSilva2Sue Dale Tunnicliffe3 University of Paraná Escola Municipal Maringá Francisca Aragão School University College London Children from southern and northern Brazil have a basic knowledge of plants, which they observe during their everyday life. Children ages between 3 to 10 years old (kindergarten & primary school), but the majority of them in the age group of 4-5 (total 145) were asked to draw what they think is a plant (total sample=332). Afterwards, a equal number of boys and girls randomly chosen were interviewed individually (mix ability) to list plants they said they knew and where they had seen them. Then they were asked to give exemplars of the local plants which they had seen. These data from the exploratory study show that pupils are in touch with their environment and recognize plants that are part of it. The everyday experiences of these children in school and out of school, at home and in leisure activities with family and friends, contribute to their knowledge about plants and such knowledge is complemented in the preschool and primary school classes by appropriate teaching. Educational implications of these findings are discussed. http://eu-jer.com/http://www.eu-jer.com/EU-JER_4_3_105_Bartoszeck_etal.pdf Plant conception preschool and primary school pupils mental model drawings
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Amauri Betini Bartoszeck*
Claudete Rosa Cosmo
Bernadete Rocha daSilva
Sue Dale Tunnicliffe
spellingShingle Amauri Betini Bartoszeck*
Claudete Rosa Cosmo
Bernadete Rocha daSilva
Sue Dale Tunnicliffe
Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory Study
European Journal of Educational Research
Plant conception
preschool and primary school pupils
mental model
drawings
author_facet Amauri Betini Bartoszeck*
Claudete Rosa Cosmo
Bernadete Rocha daSilva
Sue Dale Tunnicliffe
author_sort Amauri Betini Bartoszeck*
title Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory Study
title_short Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory Study
title_full Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory Study
title_fullStr Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory Study
title_full_unstemmed Concepts of Plants Held by Young Brazilian Children: An Exploratory Study
title_sort concepts of plants held by young brazilian children: an exploratory study
publisher RU Publications
series European Journal of Educational Research
issn 2165-8714
2165-8714
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Children from southern and northern Brazil have a basic knowledge of plants, which they observe during their everyday life. Children ages between 3 to 10 years old (kindergarten & primary school), but the majority of them in the age group of 4-5 (total 145) were asked to draw what they think is a plant (total sample=332). Afterwards, a equal number of boys and girls randomly chosen were interviewed individually (mix ability) to list plants they said they knew and where they had seen them. Then they were asked to give exemplars of the local plants which they had seen. These data from the exploratory study show that pupils are in touch with their environment and recognize plants that are part of it. The everyday experiences of these children in school and out of school, at home and in leisure activities with family and friends, contribute to their knowledge about plants and such knowledge is complemented in the preschool and primary school classes by appropriate teaching. Educational implications of these findings are discussed.
topic Plant conception
preschool and primary school pupils
mental model
drawings
url http://eu-jer.com/http://www.eu-jer.com/EU-JER_4_3_105_Bartoszeck_etal.pdf
work_keys_str_mv AT amauribetinibartoszeck conceptsofplantsheldbyyoungbrazilianchildrenanexploratorystudy
AT claudeterosacosmo conceptsofplantsheldbyyoungbrazilianchildrenanexploratorystudy
AT bernadeterochadasilva conceptsofplantsheldbyyoungbrazilianchildrenanexploratorystudy
AT suedaletunnicliffe conceptsofplantsheldbyyoungbrazilianchildrenanexploratorystudy
_version_ 1725978013850402816