| Literature DB >> 30631722 |
Tamara D Holmlund1, Kristin Lesseig1, David Slavit1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Despite increasing attention to STEM education worldwide, there is considerable uncertainty as to what constitutes STEM education and what it means in terms of curriculum and student outcomes. The purpose of this study was to investigate the commonalities and variations in educators' conceptualizations of STEM education. Sensemaking theory framed our analysis of ideas that were being selected and retained in relation to professional learning experiences in three contexts: two traditional middle schools, a STEM-focused school, and state-wide STEM professional development. Concept maps and interview transcripts from 34 educators holding different roles were analyzed: STEM and non-STEM teachers, administrators, and STEM professional development providers.Entities:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30631722 PMCID: PMC6310439 DOI: 10.1186/s40594-018-0127-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J STEM Educ ISSN: 2196-7822
Fig. 1Sensemaking cycle (adapted from Weick et al. 2005, p. 414)
Pseudonyms of participants by context group and by professional role
| Context group ➔ professional role | Ridgeview STEM Academy | Traditional Middle Schools | Statewide professional development faculty |
|---|---|---|---|
| Math teacher | Joan, Greg | Nina, Heather, Olivia, Denise, Regan | Carlton |
| Science teacher | Hunter, Clint | Anthony, Helen | – |
| Technology, Engineering, CTE teacher | Rachel, Brittany, Jad, Josh | Shawn, Beth | – |
| Non-STEM teacher | Monica, Jason | Petr, Pamala, Brenda | – |
| School/district administrator | Michelle, Will, Sandra | – | Marion, Bridget |
| Business/organization partner | – | – | Sophie, Abel, Hugh |
| Regional STEM educator | – | – | Janis, Claudia, Richard |
Fig. 2Hierarchically arranged concept map from Hunter, RSA
Fig. 3Non-traditional concept map, Bridget, PD faculty
Coding themes and rules
| Code | Theme | Rules |
|---|---|---|
| IntDis | Interdisciplinary, cross-disciplinary, integrated curriculum | STEM-focused curriculum across two or more subjects or integration of technology and engineering into math and science core concepts; formal and informal extensions and connections to include writing, reading, social studies, etc. |
| InstPrac | Instructional practices necessary for developing and implementing STEM education learning experiences | About teachers’ planning, decision-making, in-the-moment actions, and reflections upon teaching and learning; what teachers do to engage students in learning: active participation, classroom discourse, voice and choice, student-centered instruction. Teachers’ awareness of the demand for more reform-informed or ambitious instructional practices. |
| Tech | Increased use of technology in the context of PBL or EDC | Including and beyond information and communication technology use. Do not code if the technology is just listed as part of STEM. |
| Stan | Standards and the disciplinary content and practices of math, science, engineering, other | References to NGSS, CCSSM, and CTE standards. May include concepts, practices, core content, set curriculum, scope, and sequence. |
| 21CS | Twenty-first century skills | Opportunities for students to develop and practice skills and dispositions such as problem solving, collaboration, critical thinking, communication of ideas and results, creativity and innovation, and perseverance. |
| Prtnr | Professional partnerships | Connecting students with STEM professionals, into and outside of the classroom; building connections to careers and internships. Not about teacher collaboration. |
| Equ | Equity in opportunities to be successful in STEM learning | Access and opportunities to all the above for all students; thinking about who the child is, taking each student’s needs and strengths into account; recognizing the individuality of each student; seeing the particularities of a STEM education approach (teaching, learning, curriculum) as providing access for each student to participate, contribute, and grow. |
| RWPS | Real-world problem solving with integrated curricular themes | Authentic learning experiences and curricular connections between in-school tasks and out-of-school contexts. Curricular themes contextualized in real-world problems, issues, and needs. |
| StLE | Students’ learning experiences especially related to project- or problem-based learning (PBL) or engineering design challenges (EDC) | Attributes of students’ learning experiences; content or problem is meaningful to kids; sustained inquiry; authentic application of disciplinary practices and knowledge; rigorous content; use of technology; student-generated artifacts; presentations to the authentic audience; engineering design cycle, especially including empathy, research, failure, and redesign. |
| Val | Value of STEM | Developing STEM literate citizens, STEM literacy, global citizenship, and economic power. |
| TchNd | Teacher needs | Deep content knowledge in at least one of the STEM fields, pedagogical content knowledge, time for collaborative research and planning, and curricular knowledge. |
| ChPrb | Challenges and problems with STEM education | Lack of common understanding; lack of instructional resources; privileging math and science over humanities; politicization; attributes (above) out of alignment with school structures and instructional practices. |
Total number and percentage of participants who included each theme on concept maps or interview
| Theme | IntDis | InstPrac | RWPS | StLE | 21CS | Stan | Prtnr | ChPrb | Equ | Tech | Val | TchNd |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total (of 34) | 29 | 25 | 24 | 20 | 18 | 14 | 13 | 12 | 10 | 10 | 6 | 6 |
| % of total | 85 | 74 | 71 | 59 | 53 | 41 | 38 | 35 | 29 | 29 | 18 | 18 |
21CS twenty-first century skills, ChPrb challenges and problems, Equ equity, InstPrac instructional practices, IntDis interdisciplinary, Prtnr partnerships, RWPS real-world problem solving, Stan standards, StLE student learning experience, TchNd teacher needs, Tech increased technology, Val value; (see Table 2 for more description)
Frequency of inclusion of STEM education theme by participants in each context group
| Traditional Middle Schools (TrMS) | Ridgeview STEM Academy (RSA) | Statewide PD faculty | |
|---|---|---|---|
| 67–100% | IntDis, 100% | IntDis, 92% | RWPS, 84% |
| 50–66% | Stan, 58% | StLE, 62% | IntDis, 56% |
| 33–49% | Equ, 33% | Tech, 38% | Tech, 44% |
| 0–32% | TchNd, 17% | Stan, 31% | ChPrb, 22% |
21CS twenty-first century skills, ChPrb challenges and problems, Equ equity, InstPrac instructional practices, IntDis interdisciplinary, Prtnr partnerships, RWPS real-world problem solving, Stan standards, StLE student learning experience, TchNd teacher needs, Tech increased technology, Val value; (see Table 2 for more description)
Inclusion of themes by participants in each role group
| Concept map themes with % inclusion overall, as shown in Table | STEM teachers (18), % | Non-STEM teachers (5), % | School or district administrators (5), % | External partners (6), % |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Interdisciplinary (IntDis), 85% | 89 | 100 | 80 | 67 |
| Instructional practices (InstPrac), 74% | 83 | 60 | 100 | 33 |
| Real-world problem solving (RWPS), 71% | 83 | 60 | 60 | 83 |
| Student learning experiences (StLE), 59% | 72 | 20 | 80 | 33 |
| Twenty-first century skills (21CS) 53% | 61 | 20 | 60 | 50 |
| Standards (Stan), 41% | 44 | 20 | 60 | 33 |
| Partnerships (Part), 38% | 28 | 20 | 60 | 67 |
| Challenges and problems (ChPb), 35% | 33 | 40 | 40 | 33 |
| Equity (Equ), 29% | 28 | 20 | 60 | 17 |
| Technology (Tech), 29% | 22 | 20 | 60 | 33 |
| Value (Val), 18% | 6 | 0 | 0 | 83 |
| Teacher needs (TchNd), 18% | 17 | 20 | 40 | 17 |