STEM Teacher Training Network of the Netherlands

ENSITE: ENvironmental Socio-Scientific Issues in Initial Teacher Education

  • Sep-1-2019 to August-31-2022
  • Erasmus+ project
With a focus on data collection and critical data analysis, like:

  • Reasoning, argumentation & critical thinking
  • Collecting data
  • Analysing big data
  • Decision-making

[collapsibles]
[collapse title=”Abstract”]

ENSITE supports the development of future science and maths (from now on referred to as science) teachers’ environmental citizenship and related teaching competences.
ENSITE faces severe global environmental challenges such as deforestation and plastic waste. Europe’s society needs to acknowledge these challenges and accept their role in supporting sustainable development. Our educational systems have to fulfil the obligation to enable citizens to do so.
Science education, in particular, must equip them with the ability to find adequate technological solutions.
ENSITE supports this endeavour. Research proposes the engagement of socio-scientific issues (SSI) as one promising path to developing environmental citizenship competences. However, science teachers graduating from higher education (HE) institutions are not prepared to teach SSI, because they not only require teaching “scientific facts” but also involve controversial information, complex data sets and ethical, social, economic or cultural motives. Such aspects are rarely covered in initial teacher education (ITE).
ENSITE aims at improving Higher Education by including environmental SSI in science ITE. To this end we will develop an innovative approach to support teachers in (1) developing competences in dealing with environmental SSI (“Learning”) and (B) acquiring teaching skills to supporting their future students at school in becoming responsible citizens (“Teaching”) themselves.

ENSITE consists of 11 HE teams from institutions across Europe comprising experts in science education (research and practice), environmental issues, pedagogical concepts to acquire transversal and forward-looking skills (e.g. critical thinking, creativity, reasoning, reflection), students’ mobility, diversity in science courses/classrooms and large scale dissemination. All partners
acknowledged that their educational science courses rarely cover citizenship education and see huge potential with regard to benefits for them and their students.
We decided on a thoroughly elaborated range of activities to produce purposeful results.Our research activities cover the development of 13 teaching modules on environmental SSIs for future science teachers. These intellectual outputs (IOs) cover subject knowledge on SSIs (definitions, topic areas, relevance, etc.) and how to deal with them, implications for learning/teaching processes, pedagogical concepts to design lessons, and the role of teachers’ background (beliefs,
cultural, etc.) which affects teaching SSIs.

[/collapse]

[collapse title=”Modules”]

O1 The nature of SSI
O2 Reasoning, argumentation & critical thinking
O3 Collecting data
O4 Analysing big data
O5 Decision-making
O6 Negotiating social, political or ethical dimensions in SSI
O7 Aims of SSI and the curriculum
O8 Beliefs on teaching SSI
O9 Developing a SSI lesson I – focus on didactic aspects
10 Designing a SSI lesson – II
11 Scaffolding
12 SSI and assessment
13 Design of learning enviroments for ITEL: Guidelines, Template and
Webportal

[/collapse]
[collapse title=”Partners”]

Partners

Germany, The Netherlands, Austria, Bulgaria, Turkey, Spain, Cyprus, Norway, Slovakia, Greece, Czech Republic, Malta.

[/collapse]

[collapse title=”Possible SSI contexts – sustainable goals”]
We choose the Sustainable Development Goals (United Nations) as a central framework

Choices for Ensite are:

  • 3 – Good Health & Well-being
  • 7 – Affordable & Clean Energy
  • 11 – Sustainable Cities & Communities
  • 12 – Responsible Consumption & Production

[/collapse]
[/collapsibles]

Posters

to be published

References