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Articles

Elementary Teachers’ Pedagogical Content Knowledge for Teaching Structure and Properties of Matter

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Pages 665-692 | Published online: 02 Jul 2018
 

ABSTRACT

The Next Generation Science Standards call for changes in not only what is taught in elementary science but also how students engage in the learning experience to develop understanding of core disciplinary ideas. In this study we examined 5th-grade teachers’ pedagogical content knowledge (PCK) for 1 particular core idea: the small particle model (SPM) of matter. We assessed teachers’ initial PCK through a lesson plan task, the Content Representation tool, and interviews and then adapted and tested a scoring rubric to facilitate comparison of teachers’ PCK. Although teachers’ lessons included the SPM, they had difficulty identifying where this topic fit into the traditional matter unit sequence and why the SPM was important to understanding scientific phenomena. When teachers introduced the SPM, they did so by introducing and explaining the model to students (i.e., as a teaching model) rather than engaging students in developing, using, and critiquing models. Although PCK scores overall were quite similar, we observed that they tended to be higher for teachers with greater teaching experience at grade level (as opposed to teaching experience overall). In light of this, we give critical consideration to the re-novicing of elementary teachers by grade-level reassignment and the impacts this has on their development of PCK.

Notes

1 For a more thorough treatise on these debates, see http://pcksummit.bscs.org.

2 We note that the Horizon Study did not examine experience at grade level specifically but rather experience teaching more generally.

5 We note here that 2 years following participation in our PD program, only 55.3% of the teachers were still teaching fifth grade.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported through Grant No. DRL-1316683 from the National Science Foundation, Directorate for Education and Human Resources. Any opinions, findings, conclusions, or recommendations expressed in this material are our own and do not necessarily reflect those of the National Science Foundation.

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