Creating cultural refugia to transform the boundaries of science

This paper is a reflection on Bobby Habig, Preeti Gupta, and Jennifer Adams’ article Disrupting deficit narratives in informal science education: Amplifying community cultural wealth theory to youth learning and engagement . The article examines the significance of community cultural capital and the...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cultural studies of science education 2021-06, Vol.16 (2), p.549-556
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description This paper is a reflection on Bobby Habig, Preeti Gupta, and Jennifer Adams’ article Disrupting deficit narratives in informal science education: Amplifying community cultural wealth theory to youth learning and engagement . The article examines the significance of community cultural capital and the need for informal STEM institutions to engage more deliberately with the knowledge and lived experiences that youth bring to programs they participate in. In my response, I question whether the informal science institution of study had changed in response to these young people. As a ‘science insider,’ I explore how research experiences in informal science education institutions such as museums are tightly bounded by and connected with ancient European scientific practices that limit a deep embrace of community cultural wealth. If the aim is for youth to develop their science identities, then these informal science education institutions need to question what kind of science people they are asking youth to become. I consider how informal science education institutions might remake themselves as cultural refugia , where interrogation of the dominant Eurocentric norms of what science is can be challenged and transformed.
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subjects Cultural Capital
Cultural Influences
Education
Forum
Informal Education
Institutions
Interrogation
Museums
Norms
Questions
Refugia
Science Education
Science Instruction
Social Change
Sociology of Education
STEM Education
Young adults
Youth
title Creating cultural refugia to transform the boundaries of science
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