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SPOTLIGHT

Some Recent Writings:

Ranney, M.A. (in press). Why don't Americans accept evolution as much as people in peer nations do? A theory (Reinforced Theistic Manifest Destiny) and some pertinent evidence. To appear in K. Rosengren, M. Evans, G. Sinatra, & S. Brem (Eds.) Evolution challenges. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Ranney, M.A., & Thanukos, A. (2011). Accepting evolution or creation in people, critters, plants, and classrooms: The maelstrom of American cognition about biological change. In R. S. Taylor & M. Ferrari (Eds.) Epistemology and science education: Understanding the evolution vs. intelligent design controversy (pp. 143-172). New York: Routledge.

Clark, D., & Ranney, M.A. (2010). Known knowns and unknown knowns: Multiple memory routes to improved numerical estimation. In K. Gomez, L. Lyons, & J. Radinsky (Eds.), Learning in the Disciplines: Proceedings of the Ninth International Conference of the Learning Sciences, Volume 1-Full Papers (pp. 460-467). International Society of the Learning Sciences, Inc.

 

GSE Profiles


portraitMichael Ranney
Associate Professor
Cognition and Development

Office: 4655 Tolman Hall
Phone: 510-642-1551
Email: ranney at berkeley.edu
URLs: morenumerate.org/publications.html,
         convinceme.com

Staff Contact: Kate Capps
Office: 4533 Tolman Hall
Phone: 510-642-4207
Email: kate at berkeley.edu

M
ichael Ranney's research explores the nature of explanation and understanding, in both formal and informal domains. His work is intended to foster the incorporation of challenging information (e.g., on global climate change). Regarding explanatory coherence, he, his students and his collaborators study and model the nature and utility of reasoning involving both supportive and contradictory relations. They also generate curricula, methods, and artificially intelligent software designed to improve rational thinking. Ranney's work on the representation and reorganization of scientific and societal knowledge exhibits the fragmentary nature of most lay people's knowledge--in arenas as diverse as physics, biology, abortion, and immigration. His latest projects study reasoning and policy-making involving socially important rates and statistics. He was a Spencer Fellow of the National Academy of Education and the Spencer Foundation, and he was a Univ. of California Regents' Junior Faculty Fellow. Ranney heads Berkeley's Reasoning Research Group. A few of his publications are:

"Designing and assessing numeracy training for journalists: Toward improving quantitative reasoning among media consumers," in Proceedings of the Eighth International Conference on the Learning Sciences (with L. Rinne et al., 2008);

"The Perceived Consequences of Evolution: College Students Perceive Negative Personal and Social Impact in Evolutionary Theory," in Science Education (with S. Brem et al., 2003);

"Education," in The MIT Encyclopedia of the Cognitive Sciences (with T. Shimoda, 1999); and

"Toward an Integration of the Social and Scientific: Observing, Modeling, and Promoting the Explanatory Coherence of Reasoning" (with P. Schank), in Connectionist and PDP Models of Social Reasoning (1998).

For a sample of publications, click "morenumerate.org/publications.html" above (or go to convinceme.com and click the "publications" link toward the page's top).



Degrees

Ph.D., University of Pittsburgh: Experimental Cognitive Psychology

M.S., University of Pittsburgh: Experimental Cognitive Psychology

B.A., University of Colorado, Boulder: Psychology and Molecular, Cellular, & Developmental Biology (double major)

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Publications

Articles (Refereed Journals, Proceedings)

For a sample of publications, click "morenumerate.org/publications.html" above (or go to convinceme.com and click the "publications" link toward the top of that page).

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Other Affiliations

Affiliated Professor in the Psychology Department of the University of California, Berkeley.

Member of the Executive Committee of the interdisciplinary Cognitive Science Faculty of the University of California, Berkeley.

Member of the Berkeley Institute of the Environment of the University of California, Berkeley.

Member of the Executive Committee of the SESAME (Graduate Group in Science and Mathematics Education) Faculty of the University of California, Berkeley.

Member of the Institute of Personality and Social Research (IPSR) Faculty of the University of California, Berkeley.

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Areas of Specialization / Interests
Adult Development
Cognitive Development
Human-Computer Interface
Learner-centered Education
Learning
Mathematics Education
Policy Analysis and Evaluation
Research Methods
Science Education
Technology and Schools

Last Modified: 6/3/11