Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

What do primary teachers think about STEM education? Exploring cross-cultural perspectives

Smith, Kathy
George, Sindu Vinod
Mansfield, Jennifer
Citations
Altmetric:
Abstract
[Excerpt] STEM education has been positioned as a global priority (Panizzon, Corrigan, Forgasz, & Hopkins, 2015; Marginson,Tytler, Freeman, & Roberts, 2013), yet the associated demands of such aspirations are confronting education systems worldwide. Much has been written about the challenges of enacting effective STEM education, particularly when the acronym is characterised by vague defnitions (Panizzon et al., 2015). For educators, tensions often begin to emerge when education and economic agendas become confated, placing stronger emphases on schools as part of the STEM pipeline for future workforces rather than a place that nurtures and inspires the academic achievement and personal development of every student (Lyon, Jafri, & St Louis, 2012). STEM disciplines have long been seen as diffcult and disengaging areas of study for many students and challenging for primary teachers, who may hold limited background knowledge in these areas. Concern has been raised about the capacity of teachers, particularly primary teachers, to assist students in developing the required conceptual knowledge, skills and capabilities associated with effective STEM education (Lottero-Perdue & Parry, 2017).There is also concern about the capacity of teachers to fnd more effective ways to meet the learning needs of a diverse range of learners, ensuring that each student is highly engaged and develops a positive sense of achievement and self-effcacy in STEM education (Lyon et al., 2012; Milesi, Perez-Felkner, Brown, & Schneider, 2017). At a time when schools and teachers are grappling with the place of STEM education within existing educational demands and priorities, it is important to consider the infuences at play that determine how teachers defne student achievement and how they attend to student learning.This chapter discusses the fndings of a small cross-cultural study exploring STEM education with primary teachers from Australia and from India. The study set out to determine what primary teachers think about STEM education and the support that they feel they need to enhance their practice and student learning. However, the fndings also revealed that culture and social norms infuence how these teachers think and work in STEM education, ultimately shaping the learning opportunities they create for their students.
Keywords
Date
2020
Type
Book chapter
Journal
Book
STEM education in primary classrooms : Unravelling contemporary approaches in Australia and New Zealand
Volume
Issue
Page Range
115-130
Article Number
ACU Department
School of Education
Faculty of Education and Arts
Relation URI
DOI
Event URL
Open Access Status
License
All rights reserved
File Access
Controlled
Notes