Engineering is pivotal to any country's development. Yet there are insufficient engineers to take up available positions in many countries, including Australia (Engineers Australia, 2008). Engineering education is limited in Australia at the primary, middle and high school levels. One of the starting points for addressing this shortfall lies in preservice teacher education. This study explores second-year preservice teachers' potential to teach engineering in middle school, following their engagement with engineering concepts in their science curriculum unit and their teaching of engineering activities to Year 7 students. Using a literature-based pretest-posttest survey, items were categorised into four constructs (ie. personal professional attributes, student motivation, pedagogical knowledge and fused curricula). Results indicated that the preservice teachers' responses had not changed for instilling positive attitudes (88%) and accepting advice from colleagues (94%). However, there was statistical significance with 9 of the 25 survey items (p
Journal article
Analysing preservice teachers' potential for implementing engineering education in the middle school
Australian Journal of Engineering Education, Vol.15(3), pp.165-174
2009
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Abstract
Details
- Title
- Analysing preservice teachers' potential for implementing engineering education in the middle school
- Creators
- Peter Hudson - Queensland University of TechnologyLyn D English - Queensland University of TechnologyLes Dawes - Queensland University of Technology
- Publication Details
- Australian Journal of Engineering Education, Vol.15(3), pp.165-174
- Identifiers
- 2661; 991012821825502368
- Academic Unit
- Faculty of Education; School of Education
- Resource Type
- Journal article