http://undsci.berkeley.edu
The mission of Understanding Science is to provide a fun, accessible, and free resource that accurately communicates what science is and how it really works.
The process of science is exciting, but standard explanations often
miss its dynamic nature. Science affects us all everyday, but people
often feel cut off from science. Science is an intensely human
endeavor, but many portrayals gloss over the passion, curiosity, and
even rivalries and pitfalls that characterize all human ventures. Understanding Science gives users an inside look at the general principles, methods, and motivations that underlie all of science.
This project has at its heart a re-engagement with science that
begins with teacher preparation and ends with broader public
understanding. Its immediate goals are to (1) improve teacher
understanding of the nature of the scientific enterprise, (2) provide
resources and strategies that encourage and enable K-16 teachers to
reinforce the nature of science throughout their science teaching, and
(3) provide a clear and informative reference for students and the
general public that accurately portrays the scientific endeavor.
The Understanding Science site was produced by the UC Museum
of Paleontology of the University of California at Berkeley, in
collaboration with a diverse group of scientists and teachers, and was
funded by the National Science Foundation1. Understanding Science was informed and initially inspired by our work on the Understanding Evolution
project, which highlighted the fact that many misconceptions regarding
evolution spring from misunderstandings of the nature of science.
Furthermore, research indicates that students and teachers at all grade
levels have inadequate understandings of the nature and process of
science, which may be traced to classrooms in which science is taught as
a simple, linear, and non-generative process. This false and
impoverished depiction disengages students, discourages public support,
and may help explain current indications that the U.S. is losing its
global edge in science. Even beyond the health of the U.S. economy, the
public has a genuine need to critically assess conflicting
representations of scientific evidence in the media. To do this, they
need to understand the strengths, limitations, and basic methods of the
enterprise that has produced those claims. Understanding Science takes an important step towards meeting these needs.
