posted on 2024-07-12, 19:57authored byTherese Keane, Tanya Linden, Suzanne Snead
In 2015, the Office of the Chief Scientist for Australia released a position paper recognising that STEM teaching needs to start in primary school and that unique challenges and responses are required to strengthen girls’ STEM engagement. It acknowledged that pre-service teaching courses need more rigor and further emphasis on increasing pre-service teachers’ knowledge of science, mathematics and technology. The paper also calls for the transformation of STEM teaching in primary schools. Recommendations include a national professional development program for teachers, facilitating principal leadership, and providing access to STEM specialists in schools (Prinsley & Johnston, 2015).
The Invergowrie Foundation is a public charitable trust dedicated to the advancement of education of girls and women in Victoria. The Foundation has funded a three-year project to enable Swinburne University to develop resources and tools to assist teachers and parents with engaging primary school girls in STEM. This report forms part of the project: summarising recommendations for best practice and guides further project efforts. This report is based on a review of current literature. A limited amount of published academic literature could be located that specifically addresses the intersection of primary school aged girls (approximately 5-11 years old) and STEM engagement. We found that more attention was paid to this topic by grey literature, mostly in the form of consultancy reports and reviews which were commissioned by government or industry. Findings from this review are reported below, with a focus given to everyday classroom practices within the current educational context. This report addresses one of our key project objectives: to curate and create free resources for use by teachers and parents within the current environment to assist the now to the future state.
History
Available versions
PDF (Published version)
ISBN
9781925761375
Parent title
Acorns to Oak Trees: Creative approaches to teaching STEM to advance female students (Project)