Wednesday, March 28, 2012

Is Anyone Teaching Teachers of Science?


   Standards-based education reform, which is common in the K-12 education arena, has recently made inroads in many U.S. colleges and universities, including the University of Florida. Universities have begun to employ a variety of initiatives, including student-learning compacts and identification and assessment of course and program-area student-learning outcomes. While it makes sense for institutions of higher education to standardize their curricula across similar courses and to identify clear, measurable learning objectives for students, these outcome-focused reform efforts continue to ignore the elephant in the room, namely, instructor quality and training.

   In addition to general calls for U.S. education reform, policy makers, scientific organizations, and academies, and even the Obama administration, have identified the science, technology, engineering, and math fields as an educational reform priority. Sadly, however, most of these calls for systemic, nationwide STEM-teaching reform do not include a focus on postsecondary education. To obtain certification, STEM teachers at all other levels of formal education are required to demonstrate proficiency in their content areas, and pedagogy as well. In contrast, in the U.S. postsecondary-education system, content-area expertise of STEM faculty members is highly valued, while little to no attention is paid to pedagogical knowledge and skills.

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