Output list
Book chapter
Inquiry-based teaching and learning in Primary STEM
Published 2020
STEM Education in Primary Classrooms: Unravelling Contemporary Approaches in Australia and New Zealand, 28 - 44
This chapter describes the evolution of an inquiry-based activity in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM), Ball of Fear, that was developed and used in a primary classroom setting and then further developed as an inquiry-based activity in a first-year university context with pre-service teachers enrolled in a science content unit. Inquiry-based teaching and learning in primary STEM is well aligned with modern learning theory, allowing an in-depth exploration of the nature, principles and concepts of STEM disciplines. Because cooperative groups ranging from two to five members are prevalent in primary STEM and ‘almost all inquiry-learning approaches make use of group work’, the chapter highlights cooperative inquiry-based teaching and learning in primary STEM. High-level interactions among the students in the cooperative groups occurred without explicitly teaching inquiry or cooperative skills, which supports the rationale for including inquiry-based activities in primary STEM.
Book chapter
Teacher Preparation and Indigenous Students
Published 2015
Encyclopedia of Science Education, 1025 - 1027
There are multiple ways to represent “indigenous” cultures. Because this description is meant to represent an international perspective, the term indigenous is used with the understanding that locally accepted conventions and contexts reflect heterogeneity. Therefore, it is imperative to seek advice from local people about local conventions and contexts for terminology.
Book chapter
Gender differences in the environmental decision making of secondary school students
Published 1997
Environmental education for the 21st Century: International and interdisciplinary perspectives
This volume is the result of a week-long conference at Lehman College during Earth Week on environmental consciousness. Its scope and range provide an overview of the state of the art in the environmental curriculum in the humanities, social sciences, business, and journalism as well as perspectives on creating a green academic environment through teaching, administration, and media relations.