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A comparison of elementary teacher attitudes and skills in teaching science in Australia and the United States

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Abstract

A study, originally don in Australia in 1983, was replicated in an urban-suburb in the Unitd States. The Australian project vivolved matched pairs of year-fiv teachers in one of two workshops. One workshop taught the skills of teaching electricity, while the other one discussed issues in gender equity in science education (active participation of both girls and boys, comparble student-teacher interactions, and research findings concerning equity). The U.S. study provided three types of workshops (skills, equity and skills, and equity) for comparable groups of fourth and fifth grade teachers. All teachers and their students were subsequently obseved during lessons involving an electricity unit, queried both students and teachers concerning the appropriateness of different fields of science for boys and girls and their interest and aptitudes in doing various types of science. Results from both studies suggest that gender differences in student attitudes toward science may be amellorated by specific types of teacher workshop.

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Specializations: Gender research, science teacher education, science education national policy.

Specializations: Elementary and middle school science education, classroom research.

Specializations: Secondary science education, data analysis.

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Kahle, J.B., Anderson, A. & Damnjanovic, A. A comparison of elementary teacher attitudes and skills in teaching science in Australia and the United States. Research in Science Education 21, 208–216 (1991). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF02360474

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