TY - JOUR
T1 - PRE-SERVICE TEACHERS’ DESIGN OF STEAM LEARNING UNITS
T2 - STEAM CAPABILITIES’ ANALYSIS
AU - Anabousy, Ahlam
AU - Daher, Wajeeh
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© Article’s contents are provided on an Attribution-Non Commercial 4.0 Creative commons International License. Readers are allowed to copy, distribute and communicate article’s contents, provided the author’s and JOTSE journal’s names are included. It must not be used for commercial purposes. To see the complete licence contents, please visit https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - The understanding of what constitutes effective practice in STEM education and how to support it is still developing, as it is a brand-new field. The present research describes the design capabilities of pre-service elementary school teachers, when they design collaboratively STEM activities. These designing experiences occurred in a context of a PD program called “Introduction to STEM education”. During the STEM PD program, the pre-service teachers worked in six groups. Each group included three pre-service teachers who worked together throughout the PD program. Three written STEM units of three groups were chosen to be analyzed. In analyzing the STEM units, we referred to the STEM capabilities which consists of three components: STEM knowledge, skills and ways of thinking. The findings show different possibilities that STEM education can afford for task design. In terms of the integration of disciplines, the three analyzed units included activities in which, mostly, at least two disciplines were dominant. In terms of STEM skills, the designed units targeted mainly the individual learning skill instead of collaborative skills, which emphasize the need to pay special emphasis to this issue. Finally, in terms of STEM ways of thinking, analytical and evidence-based ways of thinking prevailed in the three units.
AB - The understanding of what constitutes effective practice in STEM education and how to support it is still developing, as it is a brand-new field. The present research describes the design capabilities of pre-service elementary school teachers, when they design collaboratively STEM activities. These designing experiences occurred in a context of a PD program called “Introduction to STEM education”. During the STEM PD program, the pre-service teachers worked in six groups. Each group included three pre-service teachers who worked together throughout the PD program. Three written STEM units of three groups were chosen to be analyzed. In analyzing the STEM units, we referred to the STEM capabilities which consists of three components: STEM knowledge, skills and ways of thinking. The findings show different possibilities that STEM education can afford for task design. In terms of the integration of disciplines, the three analyzed units included activities in which, mostly, at least two disciplines were dominant. In terms of STEM skills, the designed units targeted mainly the individual learning skill instead of collaborative skills, which emphasize the need to pay special emphasis to this issue. Finally, in terms of STEM ways of thinking, analytical and evidence-based ways of thinking prevailed in the three units.
KW - Activity design
KW - Elementary school
KW - Pre-service teachers
KW - Stem capabilities
KW - Stem education
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85137276859&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.3926/jotse.1621
DO - 10.3926/jotse.1621
M3 - ???researchoutput.researchoutputtypes.contributiontojournal.article???
AN - SCOPUS:85137276859
SN - 2014-5349
VL - 12
SP - 529
EP - 546
JO - Journal of Technology and Science Education
JF - Journal of Technology and Science Education
IS - 2
ER -