Science Faculty with Education Specialties Influence Teaching Practices of Departmental Colleagues

published Sep 13, 2016 12:25pm

Bush, S. D., Rudd, J. A., Stevens, M. T., Tanner, K. D., Williams, K. S., Hénard, F., ... Peterson, M. (2016). Fostering Change from Within: Influencing Teaching Practices of Departmental Colleagues by Science Faculty with Education Specialties. PLOS ONE, 11(3), e0150914. http://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0150914

Abstract: Globally, calls for the improvement of science education are frequent and fervent. In parallel, the phenomenon of having Science Faculty with Education Specialties (SFES) within science departments appears to have grown in recent decades. In the context of an interview study of a randomized, stratified sample of SFES from across the United States, we discovered that most SFES interviewed (82%) perceived having professional impacts in the realm of improving undergraduate science education, more so than in research in science education or K-12 science education. While SFES reported a rich variety of efforts towards improving undergraduate science education, the most prevalent reported impact by far was influencing the teaching practices of their departmental colleagues. Since college and university science faculty continue to be hired with little to no training in effective science teaching, the seeding of science departments with science education specialists holds promise for fostering change in science education from within biology, chemistry, geoscience, and physics departments.

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