Designing a STEM Pedagogy Course for Distance Learning: Triumphs, Challenges, and Lessons Learned

Session Description

In response to the Coronavirus pandemic, we transitioned a STEM Pedagogy course for pre-service teacher candidates in an undergraduate elementary teacher education program to be taught fully online.  In this session, we will present the overall design of the course and the strategies we used to engage pre-service teachers with integrated STEM teaching and learning.  These included opportunities for pre-service teachers to work with home-based materials to engage in STEM tasks from a learner’s perspective while also exploring digital tools they can use as teachers.  We will share examples of asynchronous modules we designed to prepare pre-service teachers for zoom sessions with the goal of integrating data collection and the engineering design process as seamlessly as possible.  Next, we will discuss the challenges and lessons learned.  While pre-service teachers had ample opportunities to explore integrated STEM education as a learner, these opportunities did not always translate to success with planning their own STEM lessons.  As a result, we intend to build in opportunities for pre-service teachers to more explicitly develop their knowledge for planning integrated STEM lessons in future course iterations.  Last, we will open up the session for a discussion among other teacher education colleagues to consider successful, class-tested strategies to help teacher candidates learn STEM pedagogy from a distance.

Presenter(s)

Aaron Sickel
University of Hawaii-Manoa

Dr. Aaron Sickel is an instructor in the elementary education program of the Institute for Teacher Education at the University of Hawaiʻi-Mānoa. He serves as a cohort coordinator for elementary teacher candidates and teaches mathematics, science, and integrated STEM methods courses. Prior to this position, Aaron served as STEM specialist for the Hawaiʻi State Department of Education’s Office of Curriculum and Instructional Design. Aaron studies how teachers and teacher educators develop their specialized knowledge for teaching STEM disciplines.


Stacy George
University of Hawaii-Manoa

Dr. Stacy George is an instructor in the elementary education program of the Institute for Teacher Education at the University of Hawaiʻi-Mānoa. She serves as a cohort coordinator for elementary teacher candidates and teaches mathematics, science, and integrated STEM methods courses. Prior to this position, Stacy served as an elementary school STEM specialist and elementary teacher in Hawaiʻi. Stacy’s scholarship interests are in science, STEM and place-based education.

Posted in Uncategorized.