Transcript
Page 1: Syntactic Knowledge in History and Science Education:

Timothy D. Slekar & Leigh Ann Haefner �

Syntactic Knowledge in Historyand Science Education:

Teacher Education and Neglect in the Academy

Timothy D. SlekarLeigh Ann Haefner

Penn State Altoona

Journal of Thought, Spring-Summer 2010

Introduction Whatdoesitmeantobeageneralist?Thetermgeneralistisoftenusedintheteachereducationliteraturetodescribethepreparationofelementaryteachersbecausetheyarepreparednarrowlyacrossabreadthofdisciplines,ratherthaninanyonedisciplinein-depth.However,thissameliteraturestrugglestoconceptualizean“essentialknowledgebase”for teaching (Cochran-Smith & Zeichner, 2005). If we cannot clearlyidentify and articulate what teachers prepared within specific disciplines needtoknowandbeabletodo,whatdoesitmeantobepreparedacrossmultipledisciplines?Althoughelementaryschoolteachersarepreparedasgeneralists,theystillneedastronggroundingindisciplinarywaysofknowing(Grossman,Schoenfeld,&Lee,2005)andbeabletousethatknowledge to develop powerful content representations that supportmeaningful student learning. Unfortunately, how teacher educationprograms support thedevelopment of thisknowledge is fraughtwithdifficulties. Teacher education has been characterized as fragmented and disconnectedbecausecourseworkandclassroompracticumexperiencesareoftenseparate,coursesaredividedtoaddressdifferentprofessionalskills,andcoursestakenintheartsandsciencesareisolatedfromeduca-tioncourses—leavingtheprospectiveteacherstobringitalltogetherandmakeitmeaningfulinschoolclassrooms(Darling-Hammond,2006). Whilethispaperfocusesprimarilyontheroleofthepreparationofdisciplinaryknowledgeinelementaryteachereducation,thisattention

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isnotmeanttodetractfromthenotionthatteacherdevelopmentalsoneedstoberootedintheknowledgeofchildren’sdevelopmental,social,andcognitiveabilities.Oneofthegreatestchallengesinteachereduca-tionisbridgingunderstandingsofthecontentwiththoseofchildren(Darling-Hammond, 2006). Aspects of subject matter knowledge arecriticaltodevelopingpedagogicalcontentknowledgeandthereforehaveanimportantplaceincoursesrelatedtotheteachingofsubjectmatter(Grossmanetal.,2005).

Theoretical Base Teaching isacomplexactionthat ispurposeful,yetdynamicandresponsivetotheclassroomenvironment,thelearners,andthesubjectmatter.Teachersmustrelyonmultipleknowledgebasestomakedailydecisionsintheirclassrooms(Darling-Hammond&Bransford,2005).Itisgenerallyagreedthateffectiveteachingbroadlyrequiresfoundationalknowledgeoflearnersandlearning,pedagogicalstrategiesandassessment,educationalcontextandcurriculum,aswellasthesubjectmattertobetaught(Grossman,1990;Magnusson,Krajcik,&Borko,1999;Shulman,19�6,19��;Smith,1999).Inotherwords,effectiveteachersknowmorethantheirdisciplinesandmorethangoodinstructionalstrategies. Itgoeswithoutsayingthatteachersneedtounderstandthesubjectstheyteach,however,whattheyneedtoknowtoteachatvariouslevels,aswellaswhattheappropriateoutcomesshouldbe,isstillapointofdiscussion(Evans,2004;Floden&Meniketti,2005;Grossmanetal.,2005).Researchersandeducatorsmaygenerallyagreethatrobustsub-ject matter knowledge is important, but disagree about what specific knowledgewithinthedisciplinesisessential(Evans,2004;Floden&Meniketti,2005;Shulman,19��).Thispresentsaninterestingdilemmagivenrecentliteraturethatisclearaboutschoolchildren’sreasoningabilitiesand,therefore,howtheyshouldlearnwithincertaindisciplines(NRC,200�;Evans,2004;NRC,200�;VanSledright,2002). Inwhatfollowsweusescienceandhistoryeducationtoillustratewhathappensinteachereducationprogramsintheseareasandistheresultoftheauthors’attemptstobridgethesedisciplinesinthecontextofconcurrentscienceandsocialstudiesmethodscourses(Haefner&Slekar,2006,200�;Slekar&Haefner,200�).Itdoesnotassumethathistoryisexhaustiveofalltheotherdisciplinesofthesocialstudies.Rather,historyandsciencearebeingusedtoillustratewhathappenswhenarichexperiencewiththesedisciplinesisneglectedinteacherpreparationprograms.

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Science and History Education Whiletheterm“inquiry”isnotnewtoanydiscipline,weneedtobeclearaboutwhatitmeansinscienceandhistory.Systemicinitiativesof the 1990s emphasized the role of scientific and historical inquiry (NCSS,199�;NRC,1996).Inparticular,theNCSSNationalStandardsforSocialStudiesTeachers (199�) called foramoredisciplinaryap-proachandsuggestedlearnersengageinexamininghistoricalprimarydocuments,identifygapsandcontextualizeavailablerecords,andcon-structevidence-basedinterpretationsofhistoricalevents.Similarly,theNationalScienceEducationStandards(NSES)(1996)alsoproposedavision of scientific inquiry where learners were engaged with testable questionsand required togivepriority to evidencewhendevelopingexplanations for scientific phenomena. Both documents emphasized learnersbecomefamiliarwithmodesofinquiryandrulesofevidence.Thisgoesbeyondacolloquialuseoftheterminquiryassimplyaskingandpursuinganswers,toincludeasystematicapproachtoanalyzingand interpreting data and developing evidence-based explanations.Thesesystemicinitiatives,whilenotwithoutcontroversy(Evans,2004),providedtheframeworkforthestate-levelstandardsmovementandschoolcurriculumchange. While the standards movement was historically important, morerecentdocumentsinscienceeducationdrawonresearchonlearningandcognitivedevelopmentandplacegreaterimportanceonthecognitiveabili-ties of children and what it means to be proficient in science (NRC, 2007, 200�).Currentthinkinggoesbeyondskillfulperformanceandvaluestheunderstandingandapplicationofknowledgeinwaysthatlearners,

appreciatethe foundationsofknowledgeandconsiderthewarrantsfor knowledge claims. Accomplished learners know when to ask aquestion,howtochallengeclaims,wheretogotolearnmore,andtheyareawareoftheirownideasandhowtheseideaschangeovertime.(NRC,200�,p.19)

Whiletheterminologyacrossthesedisciplinesissimilar,thepro-cessbywhichknowledgeandtheoriesaredevelopedcandifferacrossdisciplinarydomains.Weacknowledgethatprocessesinearthsciencemaydifferfromthoseinlifescience,andlikewise,processesinhistoryaredifferentthangeography.However,wearguethatacrossdomainsanddisciplinesevidenceisacommonfeatureandholdsaprimaryroleinknowledgedevelopment,eventhoughtherulesofevidenceandexpla-nationmaydiffer.Theissueof“whatcounts”asdataandtheprocessofdataanalysisormodelbuildingtotesthypothesescanvary.Itisthesesubtle,butfoundationaldifferencesthatrequireadepthadisciplinary

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knowledgenotaddressedinelementaryteachereducation.Whenpre-serviceelementaryteachersarebombardedwiththesameterminologyacrossdisciplines,howcanthese“generalists”beexpectedtounderstandanddifferentiatethenormsofthedisciplines?

Substantive and Syntactic Knowledge in Teacher Education Inscienceandhistory,preserviceelementaryteachersoftentakeintroductorysurveycoursesofferedbyartsandsciencesdepartments“acrosscampus”thatfocusonabreadthofknowledge.Inthissetting,studentsbecomeaccustomedtoreceivingandmemorizinginformation(McDermott, 1990; Stoddart, Connell, Stofflet, & Peck, 1993). Learning inthissettingrepresentsafocusonwhatSchwab(19��)describedasthesubstantivestructuresofthedisciplines,orthewaysinwhichcon-ceptsandprinciplesareorganizedwithinadiscipline.BallandCohen(1999)arguethattoovercomethisfoundationfortheapprenticeshipofobservation,prospectiveteachersmustlearncontentinwaysthatreflect the ways in which they are expected to teach. Specifically, they suggestthe“developmentofsubjectmatterthatemphasizesthereason-ing and ‘meanings and connections’ specific to each field” (as cited in Darling-Hammond,2006,p.194).Thisapproachismoreconsistentwithsyntacticstructuresofthediscipline,orthewaysinwhichtruth,false-hood,validityandinvalidityareestablished(Shulman,19�6).Shulmandescribedsyntacticstructureslikegrammar-“itisthesetofrulesfordeterminingwhatislegitimatetosayinadisciplinarydomainandwhat‘breaks’therules”(p.9).Whenthesyntacticknowledgeisomittedfromscienceandhistory,missingareaspectsassociatedwiththenatureofthedisciplines.Asaresult,learnersareleftunsureofhowknowledgeisconstructedwithinthenormsofthedisciplines.Iflearningaboutthenatureofthedisciplineisleftoutofthesubjectmattercoursestakenbypreserviceteachers,wherearetheopportunitiestolearnit? Inteacherpreparation,itistypicallyassumedthatcontentcoursespreparepreservice teachers insubjectmatterknowledgeandeduca-tioncoursespreparetheminpedagogicalknowledge.Thispedagogicalknowledgeshouldincludenotonlygeneralpedagogicalknowledge(i.e.classroom management, instructional principles, educational goals)but also subject-specific pedagogy or what is commonly referred to as pedagogicalcontentknowledge(Shulman,19�6,19��).Unfortunately,researchinscienceeducationsuggeststhattheprimaryemphasishasbeenonthedevelopmentofpedagogicalknowledgeforteachingthesub-stantiveaspectsofknowledge(Smith,1999;Zembal-Saul,Blumenfeld,&Krajcik,2000).Thissuggeststhatnotonlyhasthesyntacticstructures

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ofthedisciplinebeenomittedfromthesubjectmattercourses,ithasalsobeenleftoutoftheteacherpreparationcourses. Sowhatdopreserviceteachersknowaboutthesubjectstheyteach?Ingeneraltheliteraturesuggeststheyarenotpreparedinthesubjectstheyareexpectedtoteach.AccordingtoFlodenandMeniketti(2005),

a significant number of prospective teachers have only a mechanical understandingofthesubjecttheywillteach.Theyknow‘rules’tofol-low,butcannotexplain therationalebehindtherule.Some invokeinaccurate‘rules.’Iftheabilitytoexplainbasicconceptsimportantforteaching,thenthesubjectmattercoursesteachersnowtypicallytakeleavea large fractionof teacherswithout important subjectmatterknowledge. (p. 283)

Unfortunately,thisisnotanewrevelation.Foryearsresearchersinmany disciplines have suggested prospective teachers hold limitedunderstandingsofsubjectmatter (Abell&Smith,1994;Anderson&Mitchener,1994;Ball, 1990;Bloom,19�9;Clement,19�2;Hauslein,Good,&Cummins,1992;Kennedy,199�).Thelimitationstoprospec-tiveteachers’knowledgeofsciencearenot limitedtobasicconcepts,butalsoincludetheunderstandingsofthenatureofscience(Abell&Smith,1994;Hausleinetal.,1992;Lederman,1992,199�).Inaddition,studies(Abd-El-Khalick,2001;Akerson,Abd-El-Khalick,&Lederman,2000;McComas,1996)havereportedthatpreserviceteachersbelievescientistsareobjectiveanddonotconsiderhowtheirbackgroundandexperiencesmayleadthemtodifferinginterpretationsofdata. Researchinhistoryeducationalsoreportslimitationsofpreserviceteachers’knowledgeofthedisciplineashistoryisseensimplyassomethingthathappenedinthepast(McDiarmid,1994).Ithasbeenreportedthatpreserviceteachersstruggletograsptheinterpretivenatureofhistori-calnarratives(Wineberg,2001)andviewthemaslackingaprocessforverification (McDiarmid, 1994). Moreover, the disciplinary knowledge ofhistorythatteachersneedinordertothinkabouttheteachingofhis-toryasaprocessofinquiryistypicallynotdevelopedduringateacher’stimeinteachereducationprograms(Slekar,199�;VanSledright,1996).Similarly,whilelearningtosupportchildren’shistoricalinquiry,ithasbeensuggested,

even when confronted with powerful courses that challenge them,preserviceteacherstendtothinkdifferentlyandusuallyonly learnto‘talkthetalk.’The‘walking’part—teachinghistoryasaninquiryprocess—is often clumsy and the preservice students often appearparalyzed. (Slekar, 2006, p. 237)

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Children and Knowledge Itstandstoreasonthat ifpreserviceteachersstruggletounder-standsubjectmatterandthenormsofdisciplines, thenperhapsthereformdocumentsareaskingtoomuch-bothofteachersandstudents.However,empiricalresearchinformsusofschoolchildren’sabilitytolearn to think historically and engage in scientific inquiry (NRC, 2007; Hapgood, Magnusson, & Palinesar, 2004; NRC, 2008; VanSledright, 2002).Moreimportantly,itinformsthewaysinwhichschoolchildrencometomakesenseofevidenceinscienceandhistory,aswellashowbothdisciplineshavesimilar,butdistinctrulesforinterpretation(Geire,199�;Metz,2004;Wineberg,2001).Accordingtothisresearch,childrenarecapableofunderstandingtheserules,butitrequiresareformationoftheviewoftraditionalcontentandteachingmethodologies(Darling-Hammond,2006;NRC,200�;Hartzler-Miller,2001;Metz,199�,2004;NRC, 2008; VanSledright & Afflerbach, 2000) as well as beliefs about children’sabilitiestoreason(Metz,1995,2004).

Discussion Understanding children’s abilities within disciplines leads one toassume that expectations for preservice teachers should flow from this research.Afterall,teachereducatorsneedtomakesenseoftheavailableliteraturewhendesigningandteachingcoursesforpreserviceteachers.There ought to be fidelity between a teacher educator’s expectations for children’slearninginthedisciplines,whatisknownaboutchildren’sca-pabilitieswithinthedisciplines,andhowpreserviceteachersarepreparedtosupportchildren’slearning(Bain,2000).Therefore,isn’titreasonabletoexpectmethodscoursestoattendtotheroleofevidence,interpretation,andexplanationinhistory(Hicks,Doolittle,&Lee,2004;Seixas,199�)andscience(Metz,199�)sothatpreserviceteachers’classroompracticesupportsthedevelopmentofthesewaysofknowinginchildren? Butwhataboutthesubjectmattercourses?Givenpreserviceelemen-taryteachers’limitedunderstandingofsubjectmatter,askingthemtodeveloplearningexperiencesforchildrenthatdifferentiatetherulesofthedisciplinesisatallorder.Whileresearchsuggestspreserviceteacherscanunderstandimportantaspectsofevidence(Haefner&Slekar,200�),thisdoesnotaccountfortheirabilitytotranslatetheseunderstandingsintopractice.Moreover,learningcomplexaspectsofthesubjectmattercannot wait until methods courses (Akerson, Morrison, & McDuffie, 2006; Haefner & Slekar, 2008). Preservice teachers need to learn subject matter inwaysthatrepresentboththesubstantiveandsyntacticaspectsofthedisciplines.Therefore,westronglysuggest thesubjectmattercourses

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thatserviceprospectiveteachersdevoteaportionoftheircourseworktodevelopingunderstandingsofsyntacticknowledge,perhapsattheexpenseofsomesubstantiveknowledge.AccordingtoFlodenandMeniketti(2005)researchinthisareaisessentiallynon-existentandteachereducatorsknowverylittleaboutprospectiveteachers’syntacticunderstandingsofthedisciplinestheywillbeexpectedtoteach. Wesuggestthatifhistoryandscienceeducatorsvalueteachingandlearningsyntacticaspectsofthedisciplines,thenitisessentialtopaymoreattentiontothetypesofcontentknowledgeprospectiveteachersholduponenteringteachingandlearningcourses.Whenteachereducationusesthesameterminologysuchasinquiry,data,evidenceandexplana-tion,preserviceteachersmaynotdevelopunderstandingsinappropriatecontexts.Moreoftenthannottheymayfailtodevelopunderstandingsthatenablethemtodifferentiatefundamentalaspectsofknowledgeclaims.

Conclusion Thispaperarguesthatinordertocreatepowerfullearningexperi-encesrootedinthedisciplines,muchmorecooperativeworkisneededacrossmethodscourses,aswellasacrosscolleges.Teacherpreparationisnotjusttheresponsibilityofeducationprograms.Ifprospectiveteach-ershaveopportunitiestoconsiderthewaysofthinkingwithindifferentdisciplinesastheytaketheirartsandsciencescourses,whentheyentercertification programs they can begin to consider the pedagogical rela-tionshipsbetweendifferentsubjectmatters(Grossmanetal.,2005).Inparticular,webelieveteachereducatorsneedstolookdeeplyathowthisis accomplished in elementary certification programs. As a community, wehavemadeconsiderableprogressinunderstandingchildren’scogni-tiveandreasoningabilitieswithinthedisciplines.Unfortunatelywehavedonelittletosupportprospectiveelementaryteachers’reasoningabilitieswithinthedisciplines.Ifitisn’tpartoftheirteachereducation,howwilltheybepreparedtoteachchildreninthisway?

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