Science education has to be improved in order to become more
responsive to the needs of society confronted with a rapidly changing
world. Bringing science teaching up to a higher level is a key factor
in this endeavour. The authors of this book think about teachers as
part of the immediate and large communities and systems in which they
function. They consider the development of teachers professional
knowledge as a continuous process that depends on the communities they
are committed to and participate in, the discipline they are teaching,
the social context in which they perform, the instruments made
available in their environment, and their day-to-day classroom
experience. From this perspective, each teacher learns in an
individual way, but cannot learn without relying on their colleagues
and other partners. Such professional knowledge is partly tacit and
explicit, and thus possessed by teachers, experts and researchers.
Coordinating activity theory and models of pedagogical content
knowledge (PCK), the book provides a better understanding of the
growth of science teacher professional knowledge. The chapters are
organised around shared perspectives and themes and based on research
findings. The emerging model can inform pre-service teacher educators,
researchers and students. The book results from exchanges and symposia
during international conferences (ECER, ESERA) and from a two-day
seminar held at Université Grenoble Alpes in March 2015.
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Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9789463003131
Publisert
2018
Utgiver
Springer Nature
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter