Abstract
This article contends that in England, where the status of science as a core subject has been weakened due to a focus on high-stakes accountability testing, a global learning approach reignites science as a subject that can nurture active global citizens. It argues that teacher knowledge and teachers’ personal and professional commitment to global issues can inform a more relevant and purposeful primary science education, empowering both them and those they teach to become agents of change. It suggests that by exploring Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and their relation to the primary science curriculum in England, as well as developing a series of pedagogical strategies in line with global learning, teaching and learning in primary science can become more engaging and purposeful beyond fulfilling an assessment framework. A mixed-methods research design was used to explore and inform the Global Learning in Primary Science (GLPS) project. The findings suggest that while practitioners shared a positive attitude to a global learning approach, without being explicitly indicated in curriculum policy, its integration will continue to be left to chance. This global learning approach provides an opportunity for primary science education to become valued as dynamic process which supports sustainable development rather than remaining a static body of knowledge.
Highlights
The United Nations 2030 agenda for sustainable development emphasizes the importance of collaborative action to transform our world (UN, 2015)
With a specific focus on primary science education, this article argues that the promotion of teacher knowledge and professional and personal commitment to sustainable development can inform a more relevant and purposeful science education, empowering teachers and children to become agents of change
The teachers participated in a series of activities that supported them in mapping the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and pedagogical strategies onto their science schemes of work, situating activities within the framework of the English National Curriculum for Science (DfE, 2013)
Summary
The United Nations 2030 agenda for sustainable development emphasizes the importance of collaborative action to transform our world (UN, 2015). The United Nations global indicator framework for sustainable development places a focus on integrating global citizenship education across all settings (UN, 2017), but it needs to be considered how this can be operationalized. Strachan framework to become more engaging and purposeful This could be achieved by explicitly highlighting SDGs and their relation to the primary science curriculum and developing a series of pedagogical strategies in line with global learning (UNESCO, 2014). This study, explores how a global learning approach can support the operationalization of SDGs, but can simultaneously raise the quality of primary science, a subject which currently has a reduced status in English primary schools (Leonardi et al, 2017)
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