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As I write this, the end of the semester is less than a
week away. This is a good time to reflect on what I tried this
time that I had not done before, how well it worked, and
how that applies to the process of change and reform in
chemical education.
Nearly a year ago, a good friend gave me a copy of
a brief note by the Executive Director of the National
Science Teachers Association, Gerald Wheeler
(1). Its title was "Why doesn't change stick?" Quoting the Red Queen from
Alice in Wonderland, Wheeler suggested that it might be
taking all the running we could do just to maintain the status
quo. He asked readers to look systematically at "the failed
reform efforts begun in the 1960s" and questioned whether
those efforts had actually changed anything.
Although the reform efforts Wheeler questioned
were aimed at the pre-college level, his point is a good one
for college as well as high school teachers to consider,
especially at a time when new projects are aiming to reform
science education systemically. (See pages 158-160 and page 163
for more information on these projects.) If reform efforts are
typically meteoric, burning brightly for but a short time and
then disappearing, what might we do to make them less so?
I think that the power to make reform less meteoric
lies within all of us. It involves incremental, rather than
revolutionary, change. My model for reform is one in which
each of us continually experiments with manageable changes
in courses and pedagogy, evaluating their effectiveness,
casting out the less than successful ones, retaining and refining
those that help students learn more effectively, and keeping the
rest of the community informed about what works and what
does not. This model requires continual work and dedication
from all of us, but not superhuman effort that is impossible to
sustain over the long term. A meteor shower definitely gets
our attention, but far more light is shed by the fixed stars,
and they'll still be there next week.
The characteristics of incremental reform are much
like those of science itself, and it is just as fascinating to
explore. We identify or develop a new way of helping students to
learn, we adapt or devise new pedagogy and materials to
support our vision, we apply those to a course or other
instructional unit, and we evaluate the outcomes objectively. The tools
of educational research can be applied effectively and are
beginning to become more familiar to many of us,
providing objective means for evaluation. The exigencies of the
academic calendar may require long times between
experiments, but with good planning many experiments can be done
and much useful information and insight obtained.
The hallmark of the current college-level
systemic projects is student-centered learning. This involves
challenging students to construct their own knowledge, often
through group work with other students. Barrow (page 158)
suggests that this will develop students' "social and management
skills", but not their individual understanding. Those associated
with the systemic projects argue to the contrary, stating that student-centered
learning will achieve their goal of
instilling deeper understanding of chemistry concepts. This is a
very important question that is almost certainly amenable to
experimental study. Given this country's diversity of
institutions of higher education and the diversity of students
attending those institutions, it is a question that we all should be
concerned about. And all of us could and should be
contributing to the experimentation needed to resolve it.
There are many questions of this kind that each of
us could be studying every time we teach a class, laboratory,
or course. The college-level NSF-sponsored systemic
reform projects are developing pedagogy, materials, and
assessment tools that will help us initiate such an experimental
program, and other projects are being funded that are adapting
and adopting their products and philosophies. It is time for
all of us to start to use, and to evaluate, the many excellent
ideas, materials, and pedagogical tools they have created.
But we should not confine our experimentation to
just the results of the systemic projects, nor should we let it
lapse when their funding has ended. Every issue of this
Journal contains new ideas, suggestions, and pedagogical tools that
can be incorporated into our teaching and evaluated for
effectiveness across a broad range of students and institutions.
And these pages are open to those who want to report the
results of such experimentation, particularly when clear,
down-to-earth suggestions are given for how to use the new tools. It
is my intention that JCE can serve as a catalyst to increase
the rate of experimentation and incremental change.
All of us should add to our list of New Year's
resolutions one that involves applying the experimental approach to
what happens in our classrooms and laboratories. If each of
us would identify the one change that would be most
effective in improving our students' learning environment, figure
out how that change can be implemented without undue
burden on our time and energy, and try it out in the
upcoming semester, we could garner a tremendous amount of
information-and even perhaps some collective wisdom. If that
process continued long term there would be very little need
for special projects and systemic programs of reform. We
would all be carrying out reform, slowly but surely, all the time.
What did you try last semester? How did it work?
What are you going to try this semester?
Literature Cited
1. NSTA Reports December 1997/January 1998, p. 2.
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