Whose Names are in Science Textbooks? Justifying the Need for Critical Pedagogy in Tanzania Science Classrooms
Corresponding Author(s) : mjege kinyota,
Journal of Humanities & Social Science (JHSS),
##issue.vol## 7 ##issue.no## 1 (2018)
##article.abstract##
Textbooks are the most important teaching and learning resources in education in most
developing countries, including Tanzania. However, researchers in education have tended to
ignore critical issues related to textbooks. For example, while Africa, as a continent, has
contributed a lot to the development of science and technology, it is unfortunate that African
scientists and their achievements do not feature in science textbooks used in African schools.
This paper seeks to explore critical aspects in science textbooksthat are often taken for granted,
such as names of scientists cited in those textbooks. Additionally, the question of what are the
stereotypes and the hidden messages that students in developing countries learn when science
textbooks are full of white male Western scientists’ names was considered pertinent for this
study. We argue that such biased naming in science textbooks sends negative messages and
stereotypes to students on what counts as legitimate science knowledge. We also argue that
the messages, in turn, limit students’ creativity and affect their identities as science knowledge
producers and owners. The situation may be worse for non-white female students from
developing countries. We recommend that teachers should use critical pedagogy in science
classrooms so that issues related to the nature of science and the historical development of
scientific knowledge are critically questioned, analysed and discussed. Given the limited time
due to the pressure of national examinations, we also recommend teachers to use information
and communication technologies (ICT) to facilitate critical pedagogy. Lastly, we call for the
integration of indigenous scientific knowledge in science curriculum in Tanzania.
##submission.howToCite.downloadCitation##
##plugins.generic.citationStyleLanguage.download.ris####plugins.generic.citationStyleLanguage.download.bibtex##
- Akpan, C.O. 2011. The Method of African Science: A Philosophical Evaluation. American Journal of
- Social and Management Sciences, 2(1): 11–20.
- Alexander, J. & R. Jarman. 2015. Prizing Children’s Science Information Books: The Text, Reading
- and the Reader. Literacy, 49(3): 123–132.
- Alsubaie, M.A. 2015. Hidden Curriculum as One of Current Issue of Curriculum. Journal of Education
- and Practice, 6(33): 125–128.
- Apple, M. 2004. The Hidden Curriculum and the Nature of Conflict. In M. Apple (ed.), Ideology and
- Curriculum (pp. 77–98). New York: Routledge.
- Apple, M., W. Au & L. S. Gandin. 2009. Mapping Critical Education. In M. Apple, W. Au & L. S. Gandin
- (eds.), the Routledge International Handbook of Critical Education (pp. 3–20). New York: Routledge.
- Apple, M. W. & W. Au. 2009. Politics, Theory, and Reality in Critical Pedagogy. In R. Cowen & A. Kazamias
- (eds.), International Handbook of Comparative Education (pp. 991–1007). Springer Netherlands.
- Arnove, R.F. 1980. Comparative Edudcation and World Systems Analysis. Comparative Education
- Review, 24(1): 48–62.
- Balboni, M. J., J., Bandini, C. Mitchell, Z. D. Epstein-Peterson, A. Amobi, J. Cahill, T. Balboni. 2015.
- Religion, Spirituality, and the Hidden Curriculum: Medical Student and Faculty Reflections.
- Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 50(4): 507–515.
- Bryce, N. 2011. Meeting the Reading Challenges of Science Textbooks in the Primary Grades. The
- Reading Teacher, 64(7): 474–485.
- Clegg, S. 2008. Femininities/Masculinities and A Sense Self – Thinking Gendered Academic Identities
- and the Intellectual Self. Gender and Education. 20(3): 209–221.
- Condon, B. B., C. Grimsley, T. Kelley & M. K. Nissen. 2014. End of Life and Beyond as Hidden
- Curriculum. Nursing Science Quarterly, 27(1): 23–28.
- Crotty, M. 1998. The Foundations of Social Research: Meaning and Perspectives in the Research Process.
- London: SAGE Publications Ltd.
- DeJong-Lambert, W. 2004. The Politics of Constructing Scientific Knowledge: Lysenkoism in Poland.
- In G. Steiner-Khamsi (ed.), The global Politics of Educational Borrowing and Lending (pp. 129–140).
- New York: Teacher College Press Francis, B. 2000. The Gendered Subjects: Students’ Subject Preferences and Discussions of Gender
- and Subject Abilities. Oxford Review of Education, 26: 35–48.
- Freire, P. 2005. Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Continuum.
- Gadotti, M. & C. A. Torres. 2009. Paulo Freire : Education for Development, 40(6): 1255–1267.
- Hale, S. 2012. Memory Work as Resistance : Eritrean and Sudanese Women in Conflict Zones.
- Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 32(2): 429–436.
- Hooks, B. 2010. Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom, New York: Routledge.
- Kellner, D. & J. Share. 2007. Critical Media Literacy Is Not An Option. Learning Inquiry, 1(1): 59–69.
- Lacina, J. 2007. Inquiry-Based Learning and Technology: Designing and Exploring Webquests.
- Childhood Education, 83(4): 251–252.
- Legewie, J. & T. A. Diprete. 2014. The High School Environment and the Gender Gap in Science and
- Engineering. Sociology of Education, 87(4): 259–280.
- Marx, J. & F. Engels. 2006. The Ruling Class and the Ruling Ideas. In M. Durham & D. Kellner (eds.),
- Media and Cultural Studies (pp. 9–13). Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell.
- Mason, L. E. 2015. Analyzing the Hidden Curriculum of Screen Media Advertising. The Social Studies,
- : 104–111.
- Ministry of Education and Culture (MoEC). 2005. Biology Syllabus for secondary Schools. Dar es Salaam:
- Ministry of Education and Culture.
- Misiaszek, G. W. 2015. Ecopedagogy and Citizenship in the Age of Globalisation: Connections
- Between Environmental and Global Citizenship Education to Save the Planet. European Journal
- of Education, 50(3): 280-292.
- Ogawa, M. 1995. Science Education in a Multiscience Perspective. Science Education, 79: 593– 593.
- Pacho, T. 2013. Critical and Creative Education for the New Africa. Retrieved from http://www.
- researchgate.net/publication/280133902.
- Paul, A. & F. Tilya. 2014. The 2005 Secondary School Reforms in Tanzania: Disjunction Between
- Policy and Practice in Its Implementation. Journal of Education and Practice, 5(35): 114–122.
- Scherr, A. 2005. Social Subjectivity and Mutual Recognition as Basic Terms of a Critical Theory of
- Education. In G. Fischman, P. Mclaren, H. Sunker & C. Lankshear (eds.), Critical Theories, Radical
- Pedagogies and Global Conflicts (pp. 145-153). Lanham, MD: Rowman &Littlefield Publishers.
- SCSU & Moevt-Zanzibar. 2012. Chemistry for Secondary School, Forms 1 & 2. Dar es Salaam, Oxford
- University Press Tanzania Ltd.
- Settles, I. H., R. C. O’Connor & S. C. Y. Yap. 2016. Climate Perceptions and Identity Interference
- Among Undergraduate Women in STEM: The Protective Role of Gender Identity. Psychology of
- Women Quarterly, 40(4): 488–503.
- Smith, D. E. 1987. a Peculiar Eclipsing: Women’s Exclusion From Man’s Culture. In D. Smith (ed.), The
- Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology (pp. 17–43). Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
- Snively, G. & J. Corsiglia. 2000. Discovering Indigeneous Science: Implicatios for Science Education.
- Science Education, 85(6): 6-34.
- Spear, A. M. & R. B. Costa. 2018. Potential for Transformation ? Two Teacher Training Programs
- Examined Through a Critical Pedagogy Framework. Teaching and Teacher Education, 69: 202–209.
- Sprague, J. 2010. Seeing Through Science: Epistemologies. In W. Luttrell (Ed.).Qualitative
- Educational Research: Readings in Reflexive Methodology and Transformative Practice, (pp. 78-
- . New York: Routledge.
- South Carolina State University & Ministry of Education (1st Ed.). 2008. Chemistry for Secondary Schools
- Form 3, Dar es Salaam, Ministry of Education.
- Stets, J. E., P. S. Brenner, P. J. Burke & R. T. Serpe. 2017. The Science Identity and Entering a Science
- Occupation. Social Science Research, 64(1): 1–14.
- Stromquist, N. P. 2002. Theorizing Globalization. In N. P. Stromquist (ed.), Education in a Globalized
- World: The Connectivity of Economic Power, Technology, and Knowledge (pp. 1-18): Rowman &
- Littlefield Publishers.
- Tanzania Institute of Education (TIE). 1994. Physics for Secondary Schools Book Three. Dar es Salaam,
- Educational Publishers and Distributors.
- Torres, C. A. 2002. Globalization, Education, and Citizenship: Solidarity Versus Markets? American
- Educational Research Journal, 39(2): 363-378.
- Towse, P., D. Kent, F. Osaki & N. Kirua. 2002. Non-Graduate Teacher Recruitment and Retention: Some
- Factors Affecting Teacher Effectiveness in Tanzania, Teaching and Teacher Education, 18: 637–652.
- Vavrus, F. & Bartlett, L. 2012. Comparative Pedagogies and Epistemological Diversity: Social and
- Materials Contexts of Teaching in Tanzania. Comparative Education Review, 56(4): 634–658.
- Wang, M. & J. Degol. 2013. Motivational Pathways to STEM Career Choices : Using Expectancy-Value
- Perspective to Understand Individual and Gender Differences in STEM Fields. Developmental
- Review, 33(4): 304–340.
- Zion, S., Allen, C. D. & Jean, C. 2015. Enacting a Critical Pedagogy, Influencing Teachers’
- Sociopolitical Development. The Urban Review, 47: 914–933.
##journal.references##
Akpan, C.O. 2011. The Method of African Science: A Philosophical Evaluation. American Journal of
Social and Management Sciences, 2(1): 11–20.
Alexander, J. & R. Jarman. 2015. Prizing Children’s Science Information Books: The Text, Reading
and the Reader. Literacy, 49(3): 123–132.
Alsubaie, M.A. 2015. Hidden Curriculum as One of Current Issue of Curriculum. Journal of Education
and Practice, 6(33): 125–128.
Apple, M. 2004. The Hidden Curriculum and the Nature of Conflict. In M. Apple (ed.), Ideology and
Curriculum (pp. 77–98). New York: Routledge.
Apple, M., W. Au & L. S. Gandin. 2009. Mapping Critical Education. In M. Apple, W. Au & L. S. Gandin
(eds.), the Routledge International Handbook of Critical Education (pp. 3–20). New York: Routledge.
Apple, M. W. & W. Au. 2009. Politics, Theory, and Reality in Critical Pedagogy. In R. Cowen & A. Kazamias
(eds.), International Handbook of Comparative Education (pp. 991–1007). Springer Netherlands.
Arnove, R.F. 1980. Comparative Edudcation and World Systems Analysis. Comparative Education
Review, 24(1): 48–62.
Balboni, M. J., J., Bandini, C. Mitchell, Z. D. Epstein-Peterson, A. Amobi, J. Cahill, T. Balboni. 2015.
Religion, Spirituality, and the Hidden Curriculum: Medical Student and Faculty Reflections.
Journal of Pain and Symptom Management, 50(4): 507–515.
Bryce, N. 2011. Meeting the Reading Challenges of Science Textbooks in the Primary Grades. The
Reading Teacher, 64(7): 474–485.
Clegg, S. 2008. Femininities/Masculinities and A Sense Self – Thinking Gendered Academic Identities
and the Intellectual Self. Gender and Education. 20(3): 209–221.
Condon, B. B., C. Grimsley, T. Kelley & M. K. Nissen. 2014. End of Life and Beyond as Hidden
Curriculum. Nursing Science Quarterly, 27(1): 23–28.
Crotty, M. 1998. The Foundations of Social Research: Meaning and Perspectives in the Research Process.
London: SAGE Publications Ltd.
DeJong-Lambert, W. 2004. The Politics of Constructing Scientific Knowledge: Lysenkoism in Poland.
In G. Steiner-Khamsi (ed.), The global Politics of Educational Borrowing and Lending (pp. 129–140).
New York: Teacher College Press Francis, B. 2000. The Gendered Subjects: Students’ Subject Preferences and Discussions of Gender
and Subject Abilities. Oxford Review of Education, 26: 35–48.
Freire, P. 2005. Pedagogy of the Oppressed. New York: Continuum.
Gadotti, M. & C. A. Torres. 2009. Paulo Freire : Education for Development, 40(6): 1255–1267.
Hale, S. 2012. Memory Work as Resistance : Eritrean and Sudanese Women in Conflict Zones.
Comparative Studies of South Asia, Africa and the Middle East, 32(2): 429–436.
Hooks, B. 2010. Teaching Critical Thinking: Practical Wisdom, New York: Routledge.
Kellner, D. & J. Share. 2007. Critical Media Literacy Is Not An Option. Learning Inquiry, 1(1): 59–69.
Lacina, J. 2007. Inquiry-Based Learning and Technology: Designing and Exploring Webquests.
Childhood Education, 83(4): 251–252.
Legewie, J. & T. A. Diprete. 2014. The High School Environment and the Gender Gap in Science and
Engineering. Sociology of Education, 87(4): 259–280.
Marx, J. & F. Engels. 2006. The Ruling Class and the Ruling Ideas. In M. Durham & D. Kellner (eds.),
Media and Cultural Studies (pp. 9–13). Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell.
Mason, L. E. 2015. Analyzing the Hidden Curriculum of Screen Media Advertising. The Social Studies,
: 104–111.
Ministry of Education and Culture (MoEC). 2005. Biology Syllabus for secondary Schools. Dar es Salaam:
Ministry of Education and Culture.
Misiaszek, G. W. 2015. Ecopedagogy and Citizenship in the Age of Globalisation: Connections
Between Environmental and Global Citizenship Education to Save the Planet. European Journal
of Education, 50(3): 280-292.
Ogawa, M. 1995. Science Education in a Multiscience Perspective. Science Education, 79: 593– 593.
Pacho, T. 2013. Critical and Creative Education for the New Africa. Retrieved from http://www.
researchgate.net/publication/280133902.
Paul, A. & F. Tilya. 2014. The 2005 Secondary School Reforms in Tanzania: Disjunction Between
Policy and Practice in Its Implementation. Journal of Education and Practice, 5(35): 114–122.
Scherr, A. 2005. Social Subjectivity and Mutual Recognition as Basic Terms of a Critical Theory of
Education. In G. Fischman, P. Mclaren, H. Sunker & C. Lankshear (eds.), Critical Theories, Radical
Pedagogies and Global Conflicts (pp. 145-153). Lanham, MD: Rowman &Littlefield Publishers.
SCSU & Moevt-Zanzibar. 2012. Chemistry for Secondary School, Forms 1 & 2. Dar es Salaam, Oxford
University Press Tanzania Ltd.
Settles, I. H., R. C. O’Connor & S. C. Y. Yap. 2016. Climate Perceptions and Identity Interference
Among Undergraduate Women in STEM: The Protective Role of Gender Identity. Psychology of
Women Quarterly, 40(4): 488–503.
Smith, D. E. 1987. a Peculiar Eclipsing: Women’s Exclusion From Man’s Culture. In D. Smith (ed.), The
Everyday World as Problematic: A Feminist Sociology (pp. 17–43). Toronto: University of Toronto Press.
Snively, G. & J. Corsiglia. 2000. Discovering Indigeneous Science: Implicatios for Science Education.
Science Education, 85(6): 6-34.
Spear, A. M. & R. B. Costa. 2018. Potential for Transformation ? Two Teacher Training Programs
Examined Through a Critical Pedagogy Framework. Teaching and Teacher Education, 69: 202–209.
Sprague, J. 2010. Seeing Through Science: Epistemologies. In W. Luttrell (Ed.).Qualitative
Educational Research: Readings in Reflexive Methodology and Transformative Practice, (pp. 78-
. New York: Routledge.
South Carolina State University & Ministry of Education (1st Ed.). 2008. Chemistry for Secondary Schools
Form 3, Dar es Salaam, Ministry of Education.
Stets, J. E., P. S. Brenner, P. J. Burke & R. T. Serpe. 2017. The Science Identity and Entering a Science
Occupation. Social Science Research, 64(1): 1–14.
Stromquist, N. P. 2002. Theorizing Globalization. In N. P. Stromquist (ed.), Education in a Globalized
World: The Connectivity of Economic Power, Technology, and Knowledge (pp. 1-18): Rowman &
Littlefield Publishers.
Tanzania Institute of Education (TIE). 1994. Physics for Secondary Schools Book Three. Dar es Salaam,
Educational Publishers and Distributors.
Torres, C. A. 2002. Globalization, Education, and Citizenship: Solidarity Versus Markets? American
Educational Research Journal, 39(2): 363-378.
Towse, P., D. Kent, F. Osaki & N. Kirua. 2002. Non-Graduate Teacher Recruitment and Retention: Some
Factors Affecting Teacher Effectiveness in Tanzania, Teaching and Teacher Education, 18: 637–652.
Vavrus, F. & Bartlett, L. 2012. Comparative Pedagogies and Epistemological Diversity: Social and
Materials Contexts of Teaching in Tanzania. Comparative Education Review, 56(4): 634–658.
Wang, M. & J. Degol. 2013. Motivational Pathways to STEM Career Choices : Using Expectancy-Value
Perspective to Understand Individual and Gender Differences in STEM Fields. Developmental
Review, 33(4): 304–340.
Zion, S., Allen, C. D. & Jean, C. 2015. Enacting a Critical Pedagogy, Influencing Teachers’
Sociopolitical Development. The Urban Review, 47: 914–933.