Re-examining pedagogical content knowledge in science education
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Re-examining pedagogical content knowledge in science education
(Teaching and learning in science series / Norman G. Lederman, series editor)
Routledge, 2015
- : pbk
Available at 6 libraries
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Note
Includes bibliographical references and index
Description and Table of Contents
Description
Pedagogical Content Knowledge (PCK) has been adapted, adopted, and taken up in a diversity of ways in science education since the concept was introduced in the mid-1980s. Now that it is so well embedded within the language of teaching and learning, research and knowledge about the construct needs to be more useable and applicable to the work of science teachers, especially so in these times when standards and other measures are being used to define their knowledge, skills, and abilities.
Re-examining Pedagogical Content Knowledge in Science Education is organized around three themes: Re-examining PCK: Issues, ideas and development; Research developments and trajectories; Emerging themes in PCK research. Featuring the most up-to-date work from leading PCK scholars in science education across the globe, this volume maps where PCK has been, where it is going, and how it now informs and enhances knowledge of science teachers' professional knowledge. It illustrates how the PCK research agenda has developed and can make a difference to teachers' practice and students' learning of science.
Table of Contents
Preface
Section 1: Introducing PCK: Issues, ideas and development
Chapter 1 PCK: Its genesis and exodus, Lee S. Shulman
Chapter 2 The PCK summit: A process and structure for challenging current ideas, provoking future work, and considering new directions, Janet Carlson, Laura Stokes & Jenifer Helms, Julie Gess-Newsome & April Gardner
Chapter 3 A model of teacher professional knowledge and skill including PCK: Results of the thinking from the PCK summit, Julie Gess-Newsome
Section 2: Research developments and trajectories
Chapter 4 Supporting growth of Pedagogical Content Knowledge in science, Kirsten R. Daehler, Joan I. Heller & Nicole Wong
Chapter 5 Science teachers' PCK: Understanding sophisticated practice, Rebecca Cooper, John Loughran & Amanda Berry
Chapter 6 Tracing a research trajectory on PCK and chemistry university professors' beliefs, Kira Padilla & Andoni Garritz
Chapter 7 Assessing PCK: A new application of the uncertainty principle, P. Sean Smith & Eric R. Banilower
Chapter 8 From portraying toward assessing PCK: Drivers, dilemmas and directions for future research, Soonhye Park & Jeekyung Suh
Chapter 9 Towards a more comprehensive way to capture PCK in its complexity, Ineke Henze & Jan H. van Driel
Chapter 10 The PCK summit and its effect on work in South Africa, Marissa Rollnick & Elizabeth Mavhunga
Chapter 11 My PCK research trajectory: A purple book prompts new questions, Patricia Friedrichsen
Chapter 12 Pedagogical content knowledge reconsidered: A teacher educator's perspective, Rebecca M. Schneider
Chapter 13 On the beauty of knowing then not knowing: Pinning down the elusive qualities of PCK, Vanessa Kind
Section 3: Pedagogical Content Knowledge: Emerging themes
Chapter 14 Examining PCK Research in the Context of Current Policy Initiatives, Aaron J. Sickel, Eric Banilower, Janet Carlson & Jan van Driel
Chapter 15 Science teacher PCK learning progressions: Promises and challenges, Patricia Friedrichsen & Amanda Berry
Chapter 16 Gathering evidence for the validity of PCK measures: Connecting ideas to analytic approaches, Sophie Kirschner, Joseph Taylor, Marissa Rollnick, Andreas Borowski, Elizabeth Mavhunga
Section 4: Provocations and closing thoughts
Chapter 17 Re-examining PCK: A personal commentary, Richard F Gunstone
About the Contributors
Index
by "Nielsen BookData"