Faculty Publications

Quantitatively Investigating Inservice Elementary Teachers’ Nature of Science Views

Document Type

Article

Keywords

Inservice elementary teachers, Nature of science, Professional development, Quantitative

Journal/Book/Conference Title

Research in Science Education

Volume

52

Issue

5

First Page

1467

Last Page

1480

Abstract

Many nature of science (NOS) studies have demonstrated that teachers can improve their understandings of NOS with explicit and reflective instruction; however, the field has relied heavily on qualitative methods. Because qualitative studies can be difficult to compare across studies and contexts, our study sought to determine if a quantitative instrument, Students’ Understanding of Science and Scientific Inquiry (SUSSI) (Liang et al., 2008), could detect differences in NOS understandings that might make large studies and comparisons across studies easier. This study investigated changes in 60 elementary teachers’ NOS views during a year-long extensive science, technology, engineering, and math (STEM) professional development program designed for elementary teachers. We found four NOS constructs (Social and Cultural, Collaborative, Creative and Imagination, and Scientific Method) out of the eight on the SUSSI had an acceptable Cronbach’s alpha values and we found that quantitative assessment could detect interesting differences in participants’ NOS views from pre- to post-assessment.

Department

Department of Biology

Original Publication Date

10-1-2022

DOI of published version

10.1007/s11165-021-09993-7

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