TY - JOUR
T1 - TThe nature of science in genetics education
T2 - a historical analysis of Japanese high school biology textbooks, 1963–2023
AU - Wu, Haifeng
AU - Bao, Tengteng
AU - Yu, Na
AU - Ding, Yiran
AU - Dai, Xiangsheng
AU - Li, Zengjiao
AU - Zhang, Wei
AU - Li, Yingyu
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2026 Informa UK Limited, trading as Taylor & Francis Group.
PY - 2026
Y1 - 2026
N2 - Background: While international research has explored the Nature of Science (NOS) in textbooks, few studies have systematically analyzed its historical evolution within a specific subject area. Purpose: This study investigates how NOS is represented in the genetics content of Japanese high school biology textbooks from 1963 to 2023. Method: Using the ten-dimensional NOS framework by Abd-El-Khalick et al. (2017), we analyzed 14 textbooks published over the six-decade period. Results: The representation of NOS followed a trajectory of initial growth, a sharp decline in the 1980s under the ‘Relaxed Education’ policy, and a recovery from the 1990s onward. Explicit-reflective (86%–95%) and content-embedded (79%–88%) approaches were predominant. The depth of genetics mechanisms evolved from simple definitions (e.g. mutation) to system-based explanations (e.g. DNA sequence changes and natural selection), emphasizing the Tentative, Theory-laden, and Inferential NOS dimensions. Additionally, portrayals of genetic discoveries shifted from linear narratives to multidimensional, socially embedded perspectives. Conclusions: Historical curriculum reforms and advances in scientific knowledge jointly shaped the presentation of NOS in Japanese genetics education. These findings offer valuable insights for future curriculum design and NOS-integrated science education globally.
AB - Background: While international research has explored the Nature of Science (NOS) in textbooks, few studies have systematically analyzed its historical evolution within a specific subject area. Purpose: This study investigates how NOS is represented in the genetics content of Japanese high school biology textbooks from 1963 to 2023. Method: Using the ten-dimensional NOS framework by Abd-El-Khalick et al. (2017), we analyzed 14 textbooks published over the six-decade period. Results: The representation of NOS followed a trajectory of initial growth, a sharp decline in the 1980s under the ‘Relaxed Education’ policy, and a recovery from the 1990s onward. Explicit-reflective (86%–95%) and content-embedded (79%–88%) approaches were predominant. The depth of genetics mechanisms evolved from simple definitions (e.g. mutation) to system-based explanations (e.g. DNA sequence changes and natural selection), emphasizing the Tentative, Theory-laden, and Inferential NOS dimensions. Additionally, portrayals of genetic discoveries shifted from linear narratives to multidimensional, socially embedded perspectives. Conclusions: Historical curriculum reforms and advances in scientific knowledge jointly shaped the presentation of NOS in Japanese genetics education. These findings offer valuable insights for future curriculum design and NOS-integrated science education globally.
KW - curriculum Reform
KW - genetics education
KW - Japan
KW - Nature of Science (NOS)
KW - science textbooks
UR - https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105029381975
U2 - 10.1080/02635143.2026.2622389
DO - 10.1080/02635143.2026.2622389
M3 - 文章
AN - SCOPUS:105029381975
SN - 0263-5143
JO - Research in Science and Technological Education
JF - Research in Science and Technological Education
ER -