Investigating the epistemic nature of STEM: Analysis of curriculum documents from the USA using the family resemblance approach
Investigating the epistemic nature of STEM: Analysis of curriculum documents from the USA using the family resemblance approach
Although STEM education has been prevalent in curriculum policy and research literature, the precise epistemic nature of STEM and how it applies in education are relatively understudied. In this chapter, we use the framework of the Family Resemblance Approach (FRA) as a basis for highlighting the epistemic similarities and differences between the constituent STEM disciplines as represented in two US science curriculum documents. FRA allows for understanding constituent disciplines of STEM as members of a “family” that share particular features but also highlights domain specificity where particular knowledge and practices are specific to the respective disciplines. Our aim is to explore the affordances of FRA in clarifying the epistemic nature of STEM and in contributing to curriculum analysis. To do this, we present an analysis of the US Science for All Americans and the Next Generation Science Standards to examine their coverage of epistemic underpinnings of STEM disciplines and discuss implications for curriculum policy.
137-155
Park, Wonyong
eae3796e-fc99-43ba-98be-53ea5bdb14fc
Wu, Jen-Yi
34c6b72b-35c6-48e4-889e-877277728a4d
Erduran, Sibel
ff2d1099-2722-494a-b921-9994dca75c6f
Park, Wonyong
eae3796e-fc99-43ba-98be-53ea5bdb14fc
Wu, Jen-Yi
34c6b72b-35c6-48e4-889e-877277728a4d
Erduran, Sibel
ff2d1099-2722-494a-b921-9994dca75c6f
Park, Wonyong, Wu, Jen-Yi and Erduran, Sibel
(2020)
Investigating the epistemic nature of STEM: Analysis of curriculum documents from the USA using the family resemblance approach.
In,
Anderson, Judy and Li, Yeping
(eds.)
Integrated approaches to STEM education: An international perspective.
Cham.
Springer, .
(doi:10.1007/978-3-030-52229-2_8).
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Book Section
Abstract
Although STEM education has been prevalent in curriculum policy and research literature, the precise epistemic nature of STEM and how it applies in education are relatively understudied. In this chapter, we use the framework of the Family Resemblance Approach (FRA) as a basis for highlighting the epistemic similarities and differences between the constituent STEM disciplines as represented in two US science curriculum documents. FRA allows for understanding constituent disciplines of STEM as members of a “family” that share particular features but also highlights domain specificity where particular knowledge and practices are specific to the respective disciplines. Our aim is to explore the affordances of FRA in clarifying the epistemic nature of STEM and in contributing to curriculum analysis. To do this, we present an analysis of the US Science for All Americans and the Next Generation Science Standards to examine their coverage of epistemic underpinnings of STEM disciplines and discuss implications for curriculum policy.
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More information
Accepted/In Press date: 24 December 2020
e-pub ahead of print date: 24 December 2020
Identifiers
Local EPrints ID: 452931
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452931
PURE UUID: 279bd630-0abf-4741-bc76-2cfb52ce5eca
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Date deposited: 06 Jan 2022 17:51
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 04:09
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Contributors
Author:
Wonyong Park
Author:
Jen-Yi Wu
Author:
Sibel Erduran
Editor:
Judy Anderson
Editor:
Yeping Li
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