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dc.contributor.authorCabaj, Wacławpl_PL
dc.date.accessioned2017-10-11T09:17:23Z
dc.date.available2017-10-11T09:17:23Z
dc.date.issued2011
dc.identifier.isbn978-83-7271-651-4
dc.identifier.issn0239-6025
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/11716/2050
dc.description.abstractForming a concept begins with identifying a referent, followed by its description. Referents whose features meet the specified criteria will be included in the concept (Fig. 1). At schools sometimes teachers start teaching their subjects with providing definitions. All referents determine the range of the concept, whereas the group of characteristic features forms its content (Fig. 2). The concept consists of a description and a term (name) replacing it. The description should include identifying, typical (characteristic) and distinctive (diagnostic) features. They allow us to distinguish between phenomena or objects, whether similar or related. While introducing concepts in teaching, we should be very careful in selecting distinctive features as this shall limit the description. For example, to distinguish valleys drained episodically, it is enough to give their transverse profile (Fig. 3). In the description, individual features may sometimes occur. All features used in the description of the concept can be divided into: substantial, spatial, temporal, phenomenological, structural and axiological. With regard to the substantial features, it is required to provide only these properties of a substance (physical and chemical), which will allow its identification. Colour, for example, should not be given as a feature of limestone since it has no diagnostic value. Spatial features are present in describing the dimensions of objects, often when working with a map (Fig. 4). In the description of age, duration of an object or phenomenon, temporal features are used. In the geology and geomorphology, the absolute age (chronostratigraphy) and relative age (biostratigraphy and lithostratigraphy) are determined. The volatility of the concept is described by the phenomenological features. The changes can be rhythmic, cyclic or evolutionary. Sometimes, the concept is characterized by giving the structure, e.g. the percentage of minerals in the rock. The most subjective features are the axiological ones. They consist of both formalized evaluations and assessments based on individual feelings. The description of the concept's features is replaced by a strictly defined term. Terms may be derived from the colloquial language, or from the scientific or occupational discourse. They can include synonyms, e.g. Polish and Latin names of plants. Sometimes these synonyms occur only in narrow occupational groups (Figs. 5, 6). Ambiguity of terms and unnecessarily strange names assigned to them have been diagnosed as adverse phenomena in school practice which can lead to the lack of understanding (Fig. 7). Terms in the Polish language should be given precedence over the terms in foreign languages. Many objects and phenomena have precise definitions. The use of those definitions in school practice is sometimes difficult. Most frequently a student does not have the equipment or instruments that would allow him or her to determine the features with the required accuracy, e.g. the percentage of sand in a sample or mineralization of water. Sometimes, classification is complicated by individual features of the object (Fig. 8). In teaching, you can apply simplified methods, used in field work, at most. In determining the limits of, for instance, geological objects, forms or regions, you may find that the limit is a belt of a variable width (Fig. 9,10, 11). On a small- scale map, the thickness of the lines may be greater than the width of the border. For large-scale maps you may need to introduce a border strip. There is a need to correlate concepts used in teaching different subjects. Sometimes, the same terms, e.g. the angle of incidence, may be understood differently in different subjects. Terms should be used in the sense in which they were defined in the parent discipline. Concepts present in school language are both concepts that originated in ancient times (e.g. geographic coordinates) and that were recently introduced to the general language. As reflected in dictionaries, concepts were sometimes changed or made more specific. Relations of fungibility, inferiority, superiority, crossing or exclusion may occur between ranges of concepts. In logic they form the theoretical bases of a hierarchical classification between the ranges of concepts. There are some classifications in each section of geography. The question of their compatibility with the theories of logic is beyond the scope of this book. Selection of terms for school needs requires special care to ensure that the concepts are means of correct abstract thinking and of communication. This is important also because of the external examinations at the end of each stage of learning.en_EN
dc.language.isoplpl_PL
dc.publisherWydawnictwo Naukowe Uniwersytetu Pedagogicznego, Krakówpl_PL
dc.relation.ispartofseriesPrace Monograficzne - Uniwersytet Pedagogiczny im. Komisji Edukacji Narodowej w Krakowie ; 581pl_PL
dc.subjectgeografia fizycznapl_PL
dc.titlePojęcia w nauczaniu geografii fizycznejpl_PL
dc.title.alternativeConcepts in the teaching of physical geographyen_EN
dc.typeBookpl_PL


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