Publication | Open Access
How much curriculum change is appropriate? Defining a zone of feasible innovation
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Citations
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References
2006
Year
Curriculum InquiryScience EducationScience TeachingEducationMuch Curriculum ChangeEducation ResearchElementary EducationCurriculum DesignStem EducationTeacher EducationCurriculum ExperienceTeacher DevelopmentInnovative EducationPedagogyLearning SciencesDesignFeasible InnovationCurriculum DevelopmentInnovationCurriculumInnovation StudyMiddle School CurriculumSchool DevelopmentScience And Technology StudiesProfessional DevelopmentSocial InnovationTechnologyFoundations Of Education
Abstract The article grapples with the question of how much curriculum change is appropriate in a given context and in a given time frame. How can a balance be struck between stagnation, on the one hand, and the promotion of unrealistic innovation on the other? In answer to this dilemma, the concept of a zone of feasible innovation (ZFI) is proposed and explored, drawing on the literature of school development, teacher professional development, and of developmental psychology, the work of Vygotsky in particular. A series of procedures are suggested to help define the nature and scope of a ZFI in any given situation. Finally, vignettes from case studies of innovation in science education are evoked to provide real‐life counterpoints to the theoretical constructs of the literature. © 2006 Wiley Periodicals, Inc. Sci Ed , 91: 439–460, 2007
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