Young Children's Conception of the Biological World |
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Authors: | Kayoko Inagaki Giyoo Hatano |
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Affiliation: | Chiba University, Chiba, Japan, and;University of the Air, Chiba, Japan |
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Abstract: | ABSTRACT— What are the components of children's biological-knowledge system before systematic teaching at school? Can this knowledge system be called naive biology? We propose that young children's biological-knowledge system has at least two essential components—(a) the knowledge needed to identify biological entities and phenomena and (b) teleological and vitalistic causality—and that these components constitute a form of biology. We discuss how this naive biology serves as the basis for performance and learning in socially and culturally important practices, such as health practices and biology instruction. |
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Keywords: | naive biology living–nonliving distinction teleology vitalism illness causality |
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