R. Zuzovsky, CONCEPTUALIZING A TEACHING EXPERIENCE ON THE DEVELOPMENT OF THE IDEA OF EVOLUTION - AN EPISTEMOLOGICAL APPROACH TO THE EDUCATION OF SCIENCETEACHERS, Journal of research in science teaching, 31(5), 1994, pp. 557-574
This article describes and discusses an epistemological approach to th
e education of science teachers that emphasizes similarities in knowle
dge and modes of acquiring it among children, scientists in their hist
orical contexts, and student teachers. Advanced courses in science-tea
cher education aim to go beyond the attainment of scientific knowledge
and pedagogical content knowledge toward the building of a guiding th
eory of action for teaching. This theory needs to be rooted in a broad
understanding of what science is about, what is regarded as scientifi
c knowledge, and how it is generated and evolves. These questions are
of an epistemological nature. At the same time, theories of action for
teaching science are also connected with questions on individual ways
of learning and of acquiring meaning. Such questions are often answer
ed by both cognitive and developmental psychologists. Even here episte
mological consideration are essential. Constructivist epistemology, wh
ich describes the process of constructing knowledge both in individual
s and among scientists, can serve as a basis for generating such a gui
ding pedagogical theory of teaching. Educating science teachers in the
light of radical versions of constructivism can enhance this process.
This article describes in detail a course entitled ''The Growth of Th
inking on Evolution,'' which was taught to third-year student teachers
and which illustrates the approach and discusses the rationale behind
it.