期刊
JOURNAL OF RESEARCH IN SCIENCE TEACHING
卷 -, 期 -, 页码 -出版社
WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/tea.21857
关键词
community health; justice-centered science; narratives; place; race; secondary science teaching
This study examines how a biology teacher in a summer science program engaged high school students of color in a three-week science unit on community health. The study explores the impact of integrating social, historical, and political aspects into the unit and the role of the teacher's identity as a Black woman scientist. Through interviews, observations, and student artifacts, the study reveals the importance of community-driven science practices in enhancing students' understanding of community health and empowering them to reimagine community narratives.
This study explores how a biology teacher from a summer science program engaged high school students of color in a three-week science unit exploring community health at the intersection of history, race, place, and power. The goal of this study is to better understand what community-driven science looks like in a science classroom when a health equity unit is guided by a biology teacher who engages the socio-historical, political, and relational aspects of community structure and agency. Using student and instructor interviews, program observations, and student artifacts, I examine how the instructor's positioning as a Black woman scientist shaped her goals and vision and the instructional and pedagogical resources made available during the unit. In addition, I explore how engaging in community-driven science practices during the unit such as critical inquiry and data analysis supported students' sense making about community health and the possibilities they imagined for their communities. Findings illuminate how engaging community health at the intersection of history, race, place, and power shaped engagement in community-driven science practices and supported student sense making in ways that surfaced challenges, tensions, and opportunities for disrupting and reimagining community narratives. Further, finding highlight the importance of an instructor's lived experiences and pedagogical vision in supporting emergent forms of student agency and place remaking, and generating possibilities for community healing and hope.
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