Attitudes towards science: A review of the literature and its implications
King's College London · University of London
Abstract
This article offers a review of the major literature about attitudes to science and its implications over the past 20 years. It argues that the continuing decline in numbers choosing to study science at the point of choice requires a research focus on students' attitudes to science if the nature of the problem is to be understood and remediated. Starting from a consideration of what is meant by attitudes to science, it considers the problems inherent to their measurement, what is known about students' attitudes towards science and the many factors of influence such as gender, teachers, curricula, cultural and other variables. The literature itself points to the crucial importance of gender and the quality of…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 84.29
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 122
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Science education
- Curriculum
- Point (geometry)
- Social science education
- Mathematics education
- Quality (philosophy)
- Science, technology, society and environment education
- Focus (optics)
- Quality Education