Abstract

Understanding aspects of the Nature of Science (NOS) for preservice science teachers is one of the essential components to be able to understand Science and its processes. There are seven aspects of NOS: empirical, inference, creative, latent theory, tentative, scientific procedural myths, theories and laws of science, social and cultural dimensions, and their embedding in science. There are 48 preservice science teachers involved in this study. Researchers explored their views about NOS and Indigenous Knowledge (IK) through a validated questionnaire. Results showed that the students' opinions on NOS consisted of empirical, tentative, inference, law, scientific theory, and creativity. Meanwhile, aspects of laden theory, myths of scientific procedures, and social and cultural dimensions embedded with science have not been described by students. Fortunately, the students presented IK as an authentic context based on the culture in science learning. Students express IK ideas: 1) biomedicine (40 students), Biopesticide (2 students), beauty ingredients (2 students), additives (1 student), and supernatural medicine (1 student). Integrating Science and IK as an authentic context in science learning leads IK toward high technology and strengthens NOS aspects. In addition, the assumption that IK has no future is declining.

Highlights

  • Scientific literacy provides three aspects- nature of science, way Science and society interact, and content of science itself- is expected to equip people as consumers of science

  • The results show that implementation of integration of indigenous knowledge (IK) with Science in learning Science has a significant effect on the content and attitudes of student science without gender differences (Ajayi, et al, 2017; Fasasi, 2017; Bullen & Roberts, 2018)

  • Regarding the purpose of the research- exploring the conceptions of aspects of Nature of Science (NOS) preservice science teacher and mapping them and exploring real context related to IK, especially IK Bengkulu as real context in science learning

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Summary

Introduction

Scientific literacy provides three aspects- nature of science, way Science and society interact, and content of science itself- is expected to equip people as consumers of science. The latter must make intelligent decisions regarding their lives. A literate society knows the concepts, hypotheses, and scientific theories in the decision-making process and have an understanding of aspects of the Nature of Science (NOS) (Bayir, et al, 2013; Bell & Lederman, 2003; Lederman, et al, 2002). Et al, 2018; Olson, 2018)

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