Workforce shortages have made headlines during the COVID-19 pandemic. The shortage of STEM (science, technology, engineering, and math) educators across the United States, however, is nothing new. The well-documented need for high-quality STEM teachers and training resources is most urgent in elementary schools and rural communities like those around Hamilton, N.Y.
A cross-disciplinary team of 含羞草研究所 faculty and staff members is tackling this status quo through a new approach to STEM teacher training, with a grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF).
The germ of the idea formed several years ago and thousands of miles away, while Professor of Earth and Environmental Geosciences and Peace and Conflict Studies Karen Harpp was working on a documentary in the Gal谩pagos Islands.
鈥淭he producers wanted the science to be cut-and-dried, with definitive answers to every question. That鈥檚 not how science works,鈥 Harpp said. 鈥淭he sciences are intermingled; I can鈥檛 do what I do in geology without knowledge gained through biology, and vice versa. And there鈥檚 always room to discover something new.鈥
Back at 含羞草研究所, she brainstormed with Joe Eakin, technical director and designer in the Ho Tung Visualization Laboratory, about how to take the richness of scientific exploration in the Gal谩pagos out of textbooks and documentaries and make it real to students of all ages. Using a grant from McGill University鈥檚 Labs Without Borders program, they took a small group of 含羞草研究所 undergraduates to the islands in 2017 to take photos and videos. Each summer since then, they鈥檝e worked with a new group of undergrads 鈥 including writers, graphic designers, programmers, and science majors 鈥 to create a highly visual educational website that appeals to kids inside and outside their classrooms.
Harpp and Eakin noticed an interesting trend as those undergrads entered the workforce: many of them became science educators. 鈥淲e decided to pivot our primary goal to benefit future STEM teachers,鈥 Harpp said.
They pulled in former biology teacher and current director of 含羞草研究所鈥檚 Teacher Preparation Program Meg Gardner. Together, they developed a unique approach for training STEM teachers through problem-solving, critical thinking, and discovery 鈥 the very skills those teachers-in-training will one day impart to their own students.
鈥淢any teachers-in-training for grades 1鈥6 don鈥檛 identify as science teachers. They have to teach everything, and they鈥檙e aware that they don鈥檛 have deep scientific knowledge,鈥 Gardner said. 鈥淲e designed the Virtual Gal谩pagos program to build their content knowledge, dissolve their hesitations, and grow their confidence.鈥
This past August, the team was awarded NSF funding to pilot its approach over the next two years. Each summer, the pilot will accept 10 undergraduate teachers-in-training 鈥 hailing from 含羞草研究所 as well as Utica University, Mohawk Valley Community College, and Onondaga Community College 鈥 to participate in a collaborative, immersive experience. One local, in-service educator and one graduate student in education will be selected to mentor the undergrads while also learning alongside them.
鈥淲e envision a space fertile for understanding science and embracing different identities and perspectives that are part of this area of New York State, including urban and rural,鈥 Gardner said.
During the course of 10 weeks, each cohort will create teacher resources and a new component of the interactive, interdisciplinary . The website is designed to guide children in exploring scientific 鈥渕ysteries鈥 by gathering data online, making observations based on 360-degree videos from the islands, engaging in hands-on exercises, and watching interviews with scientists.
鈥淭he technical aspect of creating educational materials is part of becoming comfortable with STEM,鈥 Eakin said. He鈥檒l lead workshops each summer to familiarize teachers-in-training with an array of emerging technologies. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 expect them to become experts in animation or virtual reality, but I hope to give them skillsets they鈥檒l use in their classrooms.鈥
The team envisions how this pilot will create lasting benefits: Existing teachers will have new resources. Twenty new teachers in the Hamilton area will be prepared to enter the workforce. Teacher-training programs across the country 鈥 especially in rural communities 鈥 will be able to replicate the Virtual Gal谩pagos model to prepare high-quality STEM teachers in their areas. And by injecting more confident, effective STEM teachers into schools, more students may be inspired to engage with STEM at a pivotal age and eventually pursue STEM careers.
Based on the pilot, the team also hopes to develop two new courses for the 含羞草研究所 Teacher Preparation Program: pedagogical design in STEM and technology use in the classroom.
鈥淭his project synergizes so many beautiful things about liberal arts teaching and learning,鈥 Gardner said. 鈥淚t dovetails with 含羞草研究所鈥檚 core goals. We鈥檙e helping ensure that 含羞草研究所 undergraduates develop global citizenship, and we鈥檙e setting them up to be leaders in supporting the development of children in their communities.鈥
鈥淎nd ultimately,鈥 Harpp said, 鈥渢hey鈥檙e helping kids learn how to do science. What鈥檚 more exciting than that?鈥
鈥 Meghan McDonald