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      The Impact of Collaborative Curriculum Design on Teacher Professional Learning

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          Abstract

          Effective professional development programs for science teachers provide opportunities for active learning and teacher self-reflection on beliefs about science teaching, learning, and practice. One model that fosters active learning and promotes reflection is collaborative curriculum development, in which teachers work together with university facilitators to create curriculum materials. We used a two-case study design to investigate how teacher collaborative curriculum design (the first part of development, in which ideas for curriculum are created) impacted participant professional learning during a five-day summer institute. Interview or survey data were collected from 41 secondary biology teacher participants in two summer institutes. Results indicated that teachers experienced shifts in their science knowledge, beliefs about science, beliefs about science teaching and learning, and in their science teaching practice. We concluded that the curriculum design process, which can occur in a relatively short time period, can foster meaningful, task-oriented collaboration. The collaboration process provides the vehicle for active learning, where teachers can reflect on their beliefs while applying new knowledge to the classroom. Recommendations for other professional development programs along with a discussion of the program’s unique philosophy are provided.

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          Author and article information

          Contributors
          Journal
          9606167
          50361
          Electron J Sci Educ
          Electron J Sci Educ
          The electronic journal of science education
          1087-3430
          4 February 2021
          8 December 2015
          13 February 2021
          : 19
          : 8
          : 15129
          Affiliations
          University of Utah, United States
          University of Utah, United States
          Author notes
          Please address all correspondence to: Dina Drits-Esser, Genetic Science Learning Center, University of Utah, 515 E 100 S, Suite 550, Salt Lake City, UT, 84102. dina.drits@ 123456utah.edu
          Article
          PMC7881916 PMC7881916 7881916 nihpa1668546
          7881916
          33584089
          d708bb8d-c282-47ac-90f4-3f5dd6e2d0aa
          History
          Categories
          Article

          professional development,teacher learning,curriculum design,science teaching

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