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Abstract ‘Relevance’ is one of the key terms related to reforms in the teaching and learning of science. It is often used by policy-makers, curriculum developers, science education researchers and science teachers. In recent years, many policy documents based on international surveys have claimed that science education is often seen (especially at the secondary school level) as being irrelevant for and by the learners. The literature suggests that making science learning relevant both to the learner personally and to the society in which he or she lives should be one of the key goals of science education. However, what ‘relevant’ means is usually inadequately conceptualised. This review of the literature clearly reveals that the term relevance is used with widely variant meanings. From our analysis of the literature, we will suggest an advanced organisational scheme for the term ‘relevance’ and provide helpful suggestions for its use in the field of the science curriculum. Keywords: relevancescientific literacyinterestmotivationcurriculumcurriculum emphasiseducational reform
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Marc Stuckey
Avi Hofstein
Rachel Mamlok‐Naaman
Studies in Science Education
Weizmann Institute of Science
University of Bremen
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Stuckey et al. (Fri,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69fd1d3237bfdcfbd75098dc — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/03057267.2013.802463
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