Conceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge Aquisition

This study examined what effects, if any, cultural factors have on conceptual knowledge of evolutionary theory through natural selection. In particular, the study determines if Latino and non-Latino students differ in their misconceptions of natural selection and, if so, whether or not cultural fac...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gutierrez, Maria Del Refugio
Other Authors: Torres, Cruz C.
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7447
id ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7447
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-tamu.edu-oai-repository.tamu.edu-1969.1-ETD-TAMU-2009-12-74472013-01-08T10:41:51ZConceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge AquisitionGutierrez, Maria Del RefugioNatural SelectionEvolutionary TheoryLatinosConceptual KnowledgeThis study examined what effects, if any, cultural factors have on conceptual knowledge of evolutionary theory through natural selection. In particular, the study determines if Latino and non-Latino students differ in their misconceptions of natural selection and, if so, whether or not cultural factors could be the reason why such differences exist. A total of 1179 college students attending eight Hispanic-Serving Institutions in Texas participated in the study. The results revealed that the top two challenging natural selection concepts for students to comprehend were causes of phenotypic variation, i.e., mutations are intentional, and selective survival based on heritable traits. In addition, no statistical significant differences were found between the Latino and non-Latino students and the top four natural selection misconceptions between the groups were similar. Not even religion was found to directly contribute to evolutionary misconceptions; even though, it serves as the core of an individual’s beliefs system. However, traditional teaching methods, inadequately trained biology school teachers, lessons poor in content, insufficient teaching time, and lack of age appropriate tasks, as well as, poorly defined evolutionary terms are actually the main causes for evolutionary misconceptions.Torres, Cruz C.Wu, Ben X.2011-02-22T22:23:56Z2011-02-22T23:46:40Z2011-02-22T22:23:56Z2011-02-22T23:46:40Z2009-122011-02-22December 2009BookThesisElectronic Dissertationtextapplication/pdfhttp://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7447en_US
collection NDLTD
language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Natural Selection
Evolutionary Theory
Latinos
Conceptual Knowledge
spellingShingle Natural Selection
Evolutionary Theory
Latinos
Conceptual Knowledge
Gutierrez, Maria Del Refugio
Conceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge Aquisition
description This study examined what effects, if any, cultural factors have on conceptual knowledge of evolutionary theory through natural selection. In particular, the study determines if Latino and non-Latino students differ in their misconceptions of natural selection and, if so, whether or not cultural factors could be the reason why such differences exist. A total of 1179 college students attending eight Hispanic-Serving Institutions in Texas participated in the study. The results revealed that the top two challenging natural selection concepts for students to comprehend were causes of phenotypic variation, i.e., mutations are intentional, and selective survival based on heritable traits. In addition, no statistical significant differences were found between the Latino and non-Latino students and the top four natural selection misconceptions between the groups were similar. Not even religion was found to directly contribute to evolutionary misconceptions; even though, it serves as the core of an individual’s beliefs system. However, traditional teaching methods, inadequately trained biology school teachers, lessons poor in content, insufficient teaching time, and lack of age appropriate tasks, as well as, poorly defined evolutionary terms are actually the main causes for evolutionary misconceptions.
author2 Torres, Cruz C.
author_facet Torres, Cruz C.
Gutierrez, Maria Del Refugio
author Gutierrez, Maria Del Refugio
author_sort Gutierrez, Maria Del Refugio
title Conceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge Aquisition
title_short Conceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge Aquisition
title_full Conceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge Aquisition
title_fullStr Conceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge Aquisition
title_full_unstemmed Conceptual Knowledge of Evolution and Natural Selection: How Culture Affects Knowledge Aquisition
title_sort conceptual knowledge of evolution and natural selection: how culture affects knowledge aquisition
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/1969.1/ETD-TAMU-2009-12-7447
work_keys_str_mv AT gutierrezmariadelrefugio conceptualknowledgeofevolutionandnaturalselectionhowcultureaffectsknowledgeaquisition
_version_ 1716504739384918016