Some subscribers to
MathEdCC might be interested in a recent post "Can Education
Research Be 'Scientific'? What's 'Scientific'? (was 'in Defense of. .
. .') " [Hake (2012)]. The abstract reads:
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ABSTRACT: In
response to my post "In Defense of the NRC's 'Scientific Research
in Education' " [Hake (2012a)] at <http://bit.ly/VtXvAV>
[response by Greeno at <http://bit.ly/TXbnID>], PhysLrnR's Noah
Podolefsky (2012) at <<http://bit.ly/TMOR56>> (here and
below <<. . .>> signifies that access may require filling
out a form to obtain a Listserv password).
(a) Pointed to
articles (1) "Is the National Research Council Committee's Report
on Scientific Research in Education Scientific? On Trusting the
Manifesto" [Popkewitz (2004)] at <http://bit.ly/RqBTpp>.;
(2) "Causal Explanation, Qualitative Research, and Scientific
Inquiry in Education" [Maxwell (2004)] at
<http://bit.ly/VwWtE9>; and (3) "A Discourse that
Disciplines, Governs, and Regulates: The National Research Council's
Report on Scientific Research in Education" [Bloch (2004)] at
<http://bit.ly/XFxPoL>; stating that "these papers argue
that the NRC book is incomplete at best, and at worst a cartoonish
caricature of science."
(b) Implied that the
NRC's report "Scientific Research in Education" [Shavelson &
Towne (2002)] at <http://bit.ly/VjrQaV> did not adequately
reflect the way science works, a topic discussed in a 14-post thread
PhysLrnR thread "Should the History of Science Be Rated X?"
of 9-13 July 2012 at
<<http://bit.ly/T68VLd>>.
In this post I:
A. Argue that Podolefsky's claim that the articles by Popkewitz,
Maxwell, and Bloch show that the NRC's report is (1)"incomplete"
has been addressed by the authors of the report, and (2) "at
worst a cartoonish caricature of science" is an
overstatement.
B. Argue that Podolefsky's apparent implication (please correct me if
I'm wrong) that the way science *actually works* is contrary to the
way it's *claimed to work* in the NRC report is incorrect.
C. Provide a bibliography related to the questions "Can Education
Research Be 'Scientific'?" and "What's
'Scientific'?"
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To access the
complete 75 kB post please click on <http://bit.ly/Ujaogk>.
Richard Hake, Emeritus Professor of Physics, Indiana University
Links to Articles: <http://bit.ly/a6M5y0>
Links to Socratic
Dialogue Inducing (SDI) Labs: <http://bit.ly/9nGd3M>
Academia: <http://bit.ly/a8ixxm>
Blog: <http://bit.ly/9yGsXh>
GooglePlus: <http://bit.ly/KwZ6mE>
Twitter: <http://bit.ly/juvd52>
"It is not
enough to observe, experiment, theorize, calculate and communicate; we
must also argue, criticize, debate, expound, summarize, and otherwise
transform the information that we have obtained individually into
reliable, well established, public knowledge."
- John Ziman (1969):
"Information, Communication, Knowledge," Nature 224 (5217): 324
online at <http://bit.ly/cNPB1d>.
REFERENCES [URL
shortened by <http://bit.ly/> and accessed on 01 Nov
2012.]
Hake, R.R. 2012.
"Can Education Research Be 'Scientific'? What's 'Scientific'?
(was 'in Defense of. . . .') "; online on the OPEN! AERA-L
archives at <http://bit.ly/Ujaogk>. Post of 31 Oct 2012
19:34:16-0700 to AERA-L and Net-Gold. The abstract and link to the
complete post are being transmitted to several discussion lists and
are also on my blog "Hake'sEdStuff" at
<http://bit.ly/YrZJUS> with a provision for
comments.