Abstract

BackgroundThe gap between theory and teachers’ practice is a barrier to education improvement. There is therefore an ongoing need to understand teachers’ thinking and find new ways to meaningfully relate theory and practice in STEM education. The research explores, through teachers-as-learners’ questions, the connections made by experienced high-school biology teachers between theory and practice, their practical concerns, and the contribution of a supportive course pedagogy to these connections. The research included 31 experienced high-school biology teachers that participated in a special graduate program.ResultsApplying a grounded theory approach, the analysis of the teachers’ questions, asked as a part of their course assignments, yielded four categories: theory, practice, practice and theory, practice vs. theory. We found that most of the biology teachers’ questions asked under a supportive pedagogical design, directed at mediating theory and practice, associated practice and theory. The teachers formed two types of connections between practice and theory in their questions. While asking questions associating practice and theory, the teachers mentioned practical aspects of their work. The types of connections between theory and practice are discussed, as well as the relevance to teacher education.ConclusionsThe opportunity to ask questions during assignments that are topic-specific and designed to combine practice and theory enabled teachers to think of both domains and try to better understand their association. The research results indicate that the questions asked by teachers-as-learners can serve a dual purpose: as a way to help teachers direct their thinking to the association between theory and practice, and as a tool to describe and understand teachers’ tacit thinking. This research also emphasizes the importance of supporting STEM teachers by developing courses and professional development programs that explicitly combine educational theory and practice.

Highlights

  • Effective Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education requires teachers’ continued learning and development, including implementation of research-derived knowledge to their practice

  • We suggest that the questions that teachers ask as learners under a supporting context can serve a dual purpose, as a way to help them direct their thinking to the relations between theory and practice and as a tool to describe and understand their tacit thinking

  • The first research objective of this study was to explore the contribution of a supportive course pedagogy to the connections made between theory and practice by the participating teachers

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Summary

Introduction

Effective Science Technology Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) education requires teachers’ continued learning and development, including implementation of research-derived knowledge to their practice. Many teachers relate to educational research and theories as Furman Shaharabani and Yarden International Journal of STEM Education (2019) 6:21 ongoing need to understand teachers’ thinking and find new ways to enable them to relate meaningfully theory and practice. Questions raised by teachers during their own learning process, termed here teachers-as-learners’ questions, have the potential to serve as probes toward gaining a better understanding of the teachers’ thinking in general, and of their perspective on practice, theory, and the connections between them in particular. There is an ongoing need to understand teachers’ thinking and find new ways to meaningfully relate theory and practice in STEM education. The research included 31 experienced high-school biology teachers that participated in a special graduate program

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