Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge

Abstract Background Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education is becoming more prevalent at the elementary level, and there has been a push to focus on the integration between the STEM disciplines. Researchers within this study sought to understand the extent to which triads...

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Main Authors: Anne T. Estapa, Kristina M. Tank
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2017-03-01
Series:International Journal of STEM Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40594-017-0058-3
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spelling doaj-6e068b67736f41b9847c727d18a534162020-11-24T21:58:14ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of STEM Education2196-78222017-03-014111610.1186/s40594-017-0058-3Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challengeAnne T. Estapa0Kristina M. Tank1Iowa State UniversityIowa State UniversityAbstract Background Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education is becoming more prevalent at the elementary level, and there has been a push to focus on the integration between the STEM disciplines. Researchers within this study sought to understand the extent to which triads composed of a classroom teacher, student teacher, and an engineering fellow were able to use the context of an engineering design challenge to integrate and incorporate STEM concepts into the elementary classroom. Using a content analysis approach, researchers analyzed STEM integration across four phases of learning: professional development workshop, lesson plan, classroom enactment, and post-lesson reflection. Results Results highlight the ability for triads to conceptualize the integration of STEM concepts but also the challenge to sustain the integration of STEM concepts across phases of enactment. Conclusions The need to support teacher learning of STEM content and pedagogical practices for integration are discussed.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40594-017-0058-3Professional developmentEngineering designElementarySTEM integration
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Anne T. Estapa
Kristina M. Tank
spellingShingle Anne T. Estapa
Kristina M. Tank
Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge
International Journal of STEM Education
Professional development
Engineering design
Elementary
STEM integration
author_facet Anne T. Estapa
Kristina M. Tank
author_sort Anne T. Estapa
title Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge
title_short Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge
title_full Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge
title_fullStr Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge
title_full_unstemmed Supporting integrated STEM in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge
title_sort supporting integrated stem in the elementary classroom: a professional development approach centered on an engineering design challenge
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of STEM Education
issn 2196-7822
publishDate 2017-03-01
description Abstract Background Science, technology, engineering, and mathematics (STEM) education is becoming more prevalent at the elementary level, and there has been a push to focus on the integration between the STEM disciplines. Researchers within this study sought to understand the extent to which triads composed of a classroom teacher, student teacher, and an engineering fellow were able to use the context of an engineering design challenge to integrate and incorporate STEM concepts into the elementary classroom. Using a content analysis approach, researchers analyzed STEM integration across four phases of learning: professional development workshop, lesson plan, classroom enactment, and post-lesson reflection. Results Results highlight the ability for triads to conceptualize the integration of STEM concepts but also the challenge to sustain the integration of STEM concepts across phases of enactment. Conclusions The need to support teacher learning of STEM content and pedagogical practices for integration are discussed.
topic Professional development
Engineering design
Elementary
STEM integration
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40594-017-0058-3
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