Date of Award
Spring 5-12-2017
Degree Type
Dissertation
Degree Name
Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)
Department
Technology Leadership and Innovation
First Advisor
Todd Kelley
Second Advisor
Nathan Mentzer
Third Advisor
Jeffrey R. Holland
Abstract
This research analyzed the effects of teacher professional development and lesson implementation in integrated Science, Technology, Engineering, and Math (STEM) on: 1.) Teacher self-efficacy and their confidence to teach specific STEM subjects; 2.) Teaching outcome expectancy beliefs concerning the impact of actions by teachers on student learning; and 3.) Teacher awareness of STEM careers. High school science and technology education teachers participating in the Teachers and Researchers Advancing Integrated Lessons in STEM (TRAILS) project experimental group attended a ten-day summer professional development institute designed to educate teachers in using an integrated STEM education model to implement integrated STEM lessons. The research design utilized a quasi-experimental nonequivalent comparison group design that incorporated an experimental group and an untreated comparison group with both pretest, posttest, and delayed posttest assessments on non-randomized participants. Teacher self-efficacy has been identified as a key factor in effective teaching and student learning, and teacher awareness of STEM careers impacts students as they consider career choices. The T-STEM Survey for teachers was given for the pretest and posttest assessments to measure attitudes and beliefs toward the specific constructs of this study. Significant effects of the TRAILS professional development were found in the teacher group (experimental or comparison) and teacher subject (technology or science) in pretest and posttest scores using cumulative link models for the constructs of teacher self-efficacy and beliefs to teach STEM subjects, teacher outcome expectancy beliefs, and teacher awareness of STEM careers. Effect sizes ranged from small to large varying by construct and assessment time. Highly significant p-values and effect sizes revealed impacts on science teachers were greater when teacher subject groups were analyzed separately.
Recommended Citation
Knowles, John Geoffrey, "IMPACTS OF PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT IN INTEGRATED STEM EDUCATION ON TEACHER SELF-EFFICACY, OUTCOME EXPECTANCY, AND STEM CAREER AWARENESS" (2017). Purdue Polytechnic Doctoral Dissertations. 4.
https://docs.lib.purdue.edu/techdissertations/4
Included in
Engineering Education Commons, Science and Mathematics Education Commons, Secondary Education and Teaching Commons