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Conceptualising scientific theory-law relationship among preservice teachers with different academic abilities in science
Jasmine Jain1, Johan@Eddy Luaran2.
For learners to achieve science literacy and become effective citizens who can make informed
judgement on science-related issues in their daily lives, many studies have called for robust understanding
of Nature of Science (NOS) among science learners. This study echoed the same sentiment, focusing on an
aspect of NOS- the relationship between scientific theories and laws, among first year pre-service teachers.
In this phenomenographic study, 10 participants were involved to address two research questions, which
are (1) What are the varied ways first-year pre-service teachers experienced NoS, specifically pertaining to
the relationship between scientific theories and laws? (2) What is the variation in conceptions held by firstyear pre-service teachers about the scientific theory-law relationship based on their academic ability in
science? The findings suggest that the participants still conceptualise science knowledge as an objective
epistemology, with 2 main categories of how theory-law relationship can be conceptualised. It was also
found that there is no difference in terms of conceptualising these NOS aspects among participants of
different academic science abilities. This paper also discusses the findings in relation to the current literature
and provides some implications to the teacher preparatory programmes.
Affiliation:
- Taylor’s University, Malaysia, Malaysia
- Universiti Teknologi MARA, Malaysia, Malaysia
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Indexation |
Indexed by |
MyJurnal (2021) |
H-Index
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2 |
Immediacy Index
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0.000 |
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0 |
Indexed by |
Scopus 2020 |
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CiteScore (0.5) |
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Q4 (Education) |
Additional Information |
SJR (0.198) |
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