List of Figures
Preface
I. Science Tools
1: Introduction
2: Science is Arguing
3: Tools Scientists Use
4: Science for Every Person
5: The Role of Critical Thinking
II. Science in Everyday Life
6 : The Media
7: Pseudoscience
8: Debunking Science Myths: Separating Fact from Fluff
9: What are Scientists’ Responsibilities?
III. Science: Threats or Compromises
10: Science Progress
11: Getting People to Love Science
12: Driving the Economy through Science
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Glossary
Index
Peter A. Daempfle is associate professor of biology at SUNY College of Technology at Delhi. He has taught in the sciences for more than 20 years and has served as an advisor in the standards-based reform effort, working to improve national science literacy and to advance the importance of scientific thinking.
Daempfle describes the scientific method and critical thinking in
Good Science, Bad Science, Pseudoscience, and Just Plain Bunk. . .
. The author's goal is to show readers 'how to think like a
scientist,' enhance science literacy, and illustrate the use and
misuse of science. Case studies are included throughout the text.
After the introduction, subsequent chapters describe arguing in the
evaluation of science and science information; scientific tools;
and championing science and scientific thinking for all people.
Further discussions address critical thinking; media influence;
pseudoscience; and science myths. Later chapters address the
responsibilities of scientists in terms of ethics and in
communication; challenges; raising the status of scientists and
scientific careers; and science as an economic driver. . . . [It]
will interest high school and college science students and their
families and teachers. Summing Up: Recommended. All undergraduate
students, high school students, general readers, and science
educators.
*Choice Reviews*
Good Science, Bad Science, Psuedoscience, and Just Plain Bunk is a
book that should be required reading for every science teacher,
school administrator, and STEM instructor. Is should be used in all
university teacher education courses regardless of subject and
on-the-job-service training seminars. This book will serve as their
paramount guide to lesson design, helping educators and trainers to
formulate ideas to make science education interesting, to make the
teaching and learning experience for students relevant; to draw the
STEM prospect into the realm of dreams, of science fiction, and
into their destiny of living in science fact.
*Journal Of College Student Retention*
Good Science, Bad Science, Pseudoscience, and Just Plain Bunk: How
to Tell the Difference addresses the nature of the sciences within
a multidisciplinary context through the use of intriguing examples
and a provocative writing style that urges the reader into deeper
inquiry—the essence of science itself.
*Marlene M. Hurley, State University of New York, Empire State
College*
I find this book to be fascinating, provocative, and stimulating at
the same time. Not just a "must read" for everyone in the field of
science and science education, but an excellent resource for
cultivating and promoting science literacy for everyone.
*Julita Lambating, California State University, Sacramento*
Daempfle sets out to do something very important – to make
scientific thinking more accessible to a broader segment of the
future workforce. This is good for the student/future worker and
good for society.
*Tom Hopcroft, president & CEO, Mass Technology Leadership Council,
Inc*
Getting new and non-scientists engaged in science. This book is an
excellent example of what science books should bring to the
conversation—how to think like a scientist and why it is important
for every one of us to do so. Daempfle allows the reader to look
behind the curtain and see science as a whole rather than an
isolated field. This book is enjoyable especially as science myths
are debunked--right up there with Mythbusters for educators!
*Jennifer A. Richardson, Purdue University*
Peter Daempfle’s Good Science, Bad Science, Pseudoscience and Just
Plain Bunk: How to Tell the Difference is a must read for any
individual who wishes to evaluate competing arguments, develop
informed opinions and make sound decisions on contemporary issues
involving science. It is a well-written and timely work, which will
serve equally well as a textbook for scientific literacy studies in
higher education.
*John R. Reeher, State University of New York*
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