TY - JOUR
T1 - Contribution of Computational Thinking to STEM Education
T2 - High School Teachers' Perceptions after a Professional Development Program.
AU - ARNON, HERSHKOVITZ
AU - BAIN, CONNOR
AU - KELTER, JACOB
AU - PEEL, AMANDA
AU - WU, SALLY
AU - HORN, MICHAEL STEPHAN
AU - WILENSKY, URI
PY - 2023
Y1 - 2023
N2 - This qualitative study (N==8) reports on high school STEM teachers' perceptions of the contribution of computational thinking (CT) to their classrooms. The participants were part of a four-week professional development program, CT-STEM Summer Institute (CTSI), in which they-together with educational researchers and computational experts-0-designed curricular units to be used in their classrooms. Analyzing exit interviews with the participants, we demonstrate how the program provided an environment for holistic and meaningful teacher growth regarding content, technology. and pedagogy. By positioning teachers first as CT learners and then as equal collaborators to design CT-enhanced curricula for their own contexts, we see evidence of teachers re-evaluating and expanding their ideas of how technology and CT positively impact them and their students in ways that can transform their classrooms. We highlight the ways by which the program design is linked with this change of perceptions.
AB - This qualitative study (N==8) reports on high school STEM teachers' perceptions of the contribution of computational thinking (CT) to their classrooms. The participants were part of a four-week professional development program, CT-STEM Summer Institute (CTSI), in which they-together with educational researchers and computational experts-0-designed curricular units to be used in their classrooms. Analyzing exit interviews with the participants, we demonstrate how the program provided an environment for holistic and meaningful teacher growth regarding content, technology. and pedagogy. By positioning teachers first as CT learners and then as equal collaborators to design CT-enhanced curricula for their own contexts, we see evidence of teachers re-evaluating and expanding their ideas of how technology and CT positively impact them and their students in ways that can transform their classrooms. We highlight the ways by which the program design is linked with this change of perceptions.
KW - Career development
KW - High school teachers
KW - STEM education
KW - Secondary education
KW - Teacher researchers
KW - computational thinking
KW - professional development. co-design
KW - standards for educators
UR - https://www.learntechlib.org/p/221482/
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SN - 0731-9258
VL - 42
SP - 35
EP - 65
JO - Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching
JF - Journal of Computers in Mathematics and Science Teaching
IS - 1
ER -