ASTE Position
Statement
Science
Teacher Preparation and Career-long Development[1]
Competent
teachers have a direct, positive effect on students learning[i]. To that end, the United States must attract,
prepare, and retain pre-K - 16 science teachers who are well educated intellectually and
practically. Such science teachers possess a
conceptual understanding of science, its applications, and the nature and history of
science. They also have a deep understanding
of how people learn science as well as skills and dispositions grounded in that knowledge
that enable them to promote meaningful learning at their levels of science teaching
specialization including the early childhood and elementary years.[ii]
The ASTE
position, supported by much scholarship, is that our nations students, particularly
those in our most challenging schools, are best served by teachers who have acquired the
specialized knowledge of teaching and assessment that enable them to promote science
learning. Thus,
ASTE supports
alternative pathways that ensure competence consistent with these standards prior to full
certification as a science teacher. Such
efforts ensure that teachers can teach well and are fully prepared consistent with the National Science Education Standards (National
Research Council, 1996) and the NSTA Standards for Science Teacher Preparation National
Science Teachers Association (2003). After
certification, new teachers need special science-specific teaching support during their
first years of teaching to enable them to apply their science and pedagogical knowledge
and skills successfully. Science teacher
preparation must provide a foundation upon which teachers may build throughout their
professional lives in a phased but continuous life-long process.
Assuring Development of Highly Qualified
Science Teachers
Science
Teacher Preparation and Professional Development programs are essential elements in the
success of contemporary science education. They
should reflect the goals, research, best practices, and vision of science education
communities. To that end, programs should be
developed and maintained by professional science educators collaborating with colleagues
in the pure and applied sciences. These
programs should focus on practices that:
·
are grounded in the research and
professional literature on science learning and teaching;
·
reflect reform expectations outlined in
the National Science Education Standards and
related literature;
·
explicate developmentally appropriate
knowledge and skills in science and in science teaching at specific grade levels
(preK-16);
·
are based on the candidates content
and pedagogical knowledge and on evidence of effective teaching that includes a range of
teacher and student performances;
·
are amended periodically as the relevant
knowledge evolves with guidance from experts in science teaching, science teacher
education, and pure and applied science fields.
The Nature of Excellent
Science Teacher Preparation and Development Programs
ASTE is
committed to the preparation and development of teachers who promote the national goal of
scientific literacy for all and who also encourage the educational development of young
people who will contribute later in their lives at the frontiers of the pure and applied
sciences. Informed by results of contemporary
research on learning and teaching (see for example, NRC, 1999), science teachers must be
prepared to meet the needs of their students and communities, grow by participating with
others in the science education community, and participate in the development of science
education. ASTE is committed to assisting science teacher preparation and professional
development programs in achieving the range of learning and teaching goals that are the
consensus of professional communities in science education.[iii]
- participate in collaborative professional
settings with peers, expert science teachers, science teacher educators, and pure and
applied scientists.
·
engage in activities that promote their
understanding of science concepts and the history and nature of science;
·
experience strategies for effective
science teaching and inquiry including meaningful laboratory and simulation activities
using contemporary technology tools;
·
question and evaluate evidence and justify
assertions scientifically;
·
develop science-specific pedagogical
knowledge grounded in contemporary scholarship;
·
engage in substantive clinical experiences
where they develop and implement lesson plans appropriate for students from diverse
backgrounds, assess their success on student learning, and plan next steps to improve
their teaching;
·
find and use credible information about
the safe and effective use of laboratory activities, independent science projects, science
fairs, field trips, simulations, computer tools, and curriculum resources.
Responding to
Challenges
Multiple
complex challenges face science teaching and science teacher education in the USA. These include:
- science teacher shortages in specific
science fields and geographic areas[iv];
- profound under-representation of women and
minorities in some science teaching fields; and
- large numbers of teachers leaving science
teaching positions within their first five years of teaching[v].
The need to expand and support excellent
science teacher preparation and professional development programs in fields and locations
where there are such problems is clear. Thus,
ASTE joins with the National Science Teachers Association[vi] and others encouraging
efforts to create scholarships, loan forgiveness programs, tax rebates, and other
incentives and innovative school structures to recruit, prepare, and retain competent
science teachers. To promote these important
but challenging goals collaboration among organizations and individuals with expertise in
science teacher education, science teaching, science education research, and the pure and
applied sciences is essential.
References
National
Research Council. National Science Education
Standards, Washington, DC: National Academy Press, 1996.
National
Research Council. How People Learn, Washington,
DC: National Academy Press, 1999.
National
Research Council. Educating Teachers of Science,
Mathematics, and Technology: New practices for the new millenium, Washington, DC:
National Academy Press, 2001.
National
Science Teachers Association, Standards for Science
Teacher Preparation, Arlington, VA: National
Science Teachers Association, 2003.
National
Science Teachers Association, Position Statement on
Science Teacher Preparation, Arlington, VA: National
Science Teachers Association, 2004.