The current STEM education agenda is driven by the belief that STEM skills are crucial to innovation and development in our contemporary, technological, knowledge-based, competitive global economy (Office of the Chief Scientist, Science, technology, engineering and mathematics: Australia's future. Australian Government, Canberra, 2014; Australia's STEM workforce: Science, technology, engineering and mathematics. Australian Government, Canberra, 2016). This chapter articulates a comprehensive, multifaceted and coherent STEM vision that addresses the subtle and complex challenge of preparing "twenty-first-century" citizens within the constraints of a traditional school system and curriculum. For STEM education to be incorporated effectively and sustainably in schools, a STEM vision needs to be inclusive of school-specific needs. In this chapter, we report on our preliminary insights from a teacher professional development programme operating in ten schools in Victoria, Australia, designed to develop year 7 and 8 science, technology and mathematics teachers' capacity to teach STEM. Evaluative data from the first year of this three-year programme is presented to illustrate the variety of classroom activities that can arise from a comprehensive STEM vision. The research is showing that a STEM vision needs to be more than discrete STEM-related activities slotted into an already bulging curriculum to be sustainable.
History
Chapter number
8
Pagination
133-168
ISBN-13
9789811054488
ISBN-10
9811054487
Language
eng
Publication classification
B1 Book chapter
Copyright notice
2018, Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd.
Extent
13
Editor/Contributor(s)
Jorgensen R, Larkin K
Publisher
Springer
Place of publication
Singapore
Title of book
Stem education in the junior secondary: the state of play