Children’s ideas about the human body – A Nordic case study

Forfattere

  • Gunnhildur Óskarsdóttir University of Iceland, School of Education, v/Stakkahlí, IS-105 Reykjavík
  • Birgitte Stougaard The Department of Teacher Education in Jelling, University College Lillebaelt
  • Ane Fleischer Ilinniarfissuaq, Teacher Education in Greenland
  • Eila Jeronen University of Oulu
  • Finnur Lützen Føroya Studentakúli and Nursery school
  • Roar Kråkenes Telemark University College

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5617/nordina.240

Sammendrag

This paper explores the findings of a study of the ideas young school children in the Nordic countries have about the human body e.g. structure and location of bones and organs (heart, lungs, stomach and brain etc.) before being taught about it formally at school. The aims of the study were to investigate children’s ideas about the human body and to see if their ideas differ between Nordic countries and if so, in what way. Twenty 6 year old children in each country were chosen (7–8 year olds in Finland) and asked to draw the bones and the organs in the body and to explain their drawings. Mixed methods were used in this study to get a broader view of the double aim of the study. Special scales were used to get a quantitative view of children’s ideas as put forward in their drawings and the study also had some elements of a case study as it was meant to focus on children’s ideas about a special issue, that is, the human body. The results show many similarities between the children’s ideas presented in the drawings and also interesting differences. The results also suggest that the culture aspects in each country such as cooking habits, typical foods, pictures in books and language expressions influence children’s ideas about bones and organs in the human body.

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