tHE tEACHING OF SCIENCE: 21 st-CENTURY PERSPECTIVES 159
Epilogue
Science Teachers as
21st-Century Leaders
Since early in the 21st century, when I began preparing the lectures that form
the heart of this book, there have been numerous and varied reports regarding
the education system, with recommendations directed toward the ultimate aim
of improving student achievement. Science teachers have heard about schools
making “adequate yearly progress,” systems closing the “achievement gap,”
and the country needing to “move to the top” on international assessments.
Achievement on national assessments and state tests have come to dominate
perceptions by the education community, including science teachers. Regardless
of the phrases used to express the aims, the goals require attaining higher levels
of achievement for all students.
The perspective in this book has centered on science teachers and issues
closely related to science teaching and student learning. For example, I addressed
themes such as fulfilling the goal of scientific literacy, reforming school science
programs, teaching science as inquiry, and improving science teachers’ knowl-
edge and skills. All of these themes relate directly to the instructional core and,
in the end, student achievement. Before turning to leadership, let me briefly
restate and clarify the challenges from the first chapter.
21st-Century Challenges
There are five challenges that the science education community has to confront
as we enter the second decade of the 21st century. Regardless of the current
terms, I argue that these challenges and the responses are at the heart of science
teaching, as they have been in the past and will continue to be in the future.
The challenges are
• achieving scientific literacy,
• reforming science programs,
• teaching science as inquiry,
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