Publication | Closed Access
“Making Space”: How Novice Teachers Create Opportunities for Equitable Sense-Making in Elementary Science
115
Citations
43
References
2018
Year
Inquiry-based LearningScience EducationNovice TeachersScience TeachingEducationClassroom DiscourseElementary EducationStem EducationTeacher EducationElementary ScienceTeacher DevelopmentClassroom PracticeCognitive ScienceScientific LiteracyLearning SciencesSpace ”TeachingInstructional CommunicationSpace EducationProfessional DevelopmentTeacher Preparation
Scholarly calls to reform science education for all students emphasize scientific sense-making. Despite the importance of sense-making, few strategies exist to help novice teachers learn to notice and respond equitably to students’ scientific sense-making in elementary science. In this article, we report on a qualitative case study in which we investigated sense-making moments that occurred when novice teachers facilitated classroom discussions. Findings suggest that when novice teachers made space in class discussions for sense-making—for example, by trying different responses to clarify student ideas or waiting before responding to figure out next steps—this expanded opportunities for shared epistemic authority; however, novices did not often recognize these moments as productive for sense-making. Findings also suggest that novice teachers may benefit from support to help them develop their abilities to notice, interpret, and respond equitably to students’ scientific sense-making in class discussions.
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