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Book Details
Abstract
Who wants to change school science education and why? What mechanisms exist to effect change? What implications do they have for teachers' professionalism? These are the principal questions explored in this book. The authors focus on strategies for effecting change, including decentralized and statutory mechanisms, and the use of systems of assessment. The authors question the effectiveness of centralized programmes in improving the quality of students' science education. They suggest that this arises from a failure to acknowledge the contribution that the science teaching profession must make to reform. They argue that sustained and effective change, embodying improvements in standards, depends upon promoting the initiative, authority and expertise of science teachers themselves, and upon finding a new balance between these professional characteristics and the political demand for accountability. Science Education will be of interest to teachers, policy-makers and researchers in any educational system which strives to raise the quality of science education in its schools.
Table of Contents
Section Title | Page | Action | Price |
---|---|---|---|
Introduction | |||
1. Evolution of the PT | |||
2. The PT tackles poverty | |||
3. The changing face of trade unionism | |||
4. The PT’s Faustian pact | |||
5. The 2013 protests | |||
6. The 2014 elections | |||
7. An uncertain future | |||
Glossary |