Concepedia

Publication | Open Access

A conceptual framework for integrated STEM education

1.6K

Citations

41

References

2016

Year

TLDR

Global environmental, social, and economic challenges drive a pressing need to reform STEM education, yet teachers lack cohesive frameworks to integrate disciplines, leading to student disengagement. The paper aims to develop and operationalize an integrated STEM education framework that blends key concepts and learning theories to guide future research. The authors operationalize core STEM concepts and integrate learning theories to construct a comprehensive framework for integrated STEM education.

Abstract

The global urgency to improve STEM education may be driven by environmental and social impacts of the twenty-first century which in turn jeopardizes global security and economic stability. The complexity of these global factors reach beyond just helping students achieve high scores in math and science assessments. Friedman (The world is flat: A brief history of the twenty-first century, 2005) helped illustrate the complexity of a global society, and educators must help students prepare for this global shift. In response to these challenges, the USA experienced massive STEM educational reforms in the last two decades. In practice, STEM educators lack cohesive understanding of STEM education. Therefore, they could benefit from a STEM education conceptual framework. The process of integrating science, technology, engineering, and mathematics in authentic contexts can be as complex as the global challenges that demand a new generation of STEM experts. Educational researchers indicate that teachers struggle to make connections across the STEM disciplines. Consequently, students are often disinterested in science and math when they learn in an isolated and disjoined manner missing connections to crosscutting concepts and real-world applications. The following paper will operationalize STEM education key concepts and blend learning theories to build an integrated STEM education framework to assist in further researching integrated STEM education.

References

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