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Defining Optimal Knowledge for Teaching Science and Mathematics

author: Mary Kennedy
description: Below you will find an abstract only. The full article will be sent to Conference participants in hardcopy by the MERCK Institute for Science Education.
published: 10/21/1998
posted to site: 10/21/1998

Defining Optimal Knowledge for Teaching Science and Mathematics

Mary Kennedy

Below you will find an abstract only. The full article will be sent to Conference participants in hardcopy by the MERCK Institute for Science Education.

Abstract

This paper raises the question of what K-12 teachers need to know in order to teach mathematics and science well. It begins by examining reform proposals for K-12 science and mathematics teaching with an eye toward defining what "good" teaching practice consists of. It then examines a wide range of literature to delineate the varieties of knowledge that have been associated with this kind of teaching. While the focus is on subject matter knowledge, the paper addressed the character of knowledge rather than the content of that knowledge. Types of knowledge identified in the literature include conceptual understanding of the subject, pedagogical content knowledge, beliefs about the nature of work in science and mathematics, attitudes toward these subjects, and actual teaching practices with students. The literature is incomplete with respect to which of these is relatively more or relatively less important.