Publication | Open Access
Students (ages 6, 10, and 15 years) in six countries knowledge of animals
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Citations
33
References
2013
Year
Science EducationAnimal WelfareEducationEducation ResearchElementary EducationMammalogyCountries KnowledgeVeterinary EducationKnowledge StudentsBehavioral SciencesFolk Biological KnowledgeAnimal BehaviourCultureHuman-animal InteractionSecondary EducationCross-cultural PerspectiveEthnographyAnthropologyAnimal MindAnimal BehaviorCultural Anthropology
This article considers the knowledge students (ages 6, 10, and 15 years) have of animals from a cross-cultural perspective. Students from six countries (Brazil, England, Finland, Iceland, Portugal, and the United States of America) were asked to free-list as many animals as possible and state where they had seen or learned about the animals. The results were analyzed and they indicate that 1) Students are aware of animals. 2) Students are more aware of mammals as examples of animals. 3) There is a globally shared folk biological knowledge of animals. 4) Students learn about animals during sociocultural interactions. The educational implications are discussed.
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