164 NaTIoNal SCIENCE TEaChERS aSSoCIaTIoN
Epilogue Science Teachers as 21st-Century leaders
The Genius of American Education, Lawrence Cremin pointed out the misguided
nature of a teacher-proof curriculum. As part of a discussion of education
reform, Cremin suggested that reformers rightfully had a concern about contem-
porary teachers and teaching. But he saw their solution of designing materials
impervious to misuse as flawed. Cremin gives advice that is appropriate for
any generation of leaders and reformers, especially those teacher educators and
science coordinators who are directly responsible for the professional develop-
ment of science teachers.
But education is too significant and dynamic an enterprise to be left to mere
technicians; and we might as well begin now the prodigious task of preparing
men and women who understand not only the substance of what they are
teaching but also the theories behind the particular strategies they employ to
convey that substance. A society committed to the continuing intellectual,
aesthetic, and moral growth of all its members can ill afford less on the part of
those who undertake to teach. (Cremin 1965, p. 57)
The quotation notes the disparity between the intentions of teacher-proof
curriculum materials and the extent to which that goal was achieved. The
teacher-proof approach to curriculum did not work.
In the wake of teacher-proof materials, teacher-dependent materials
emerged. Although the origins may be in well-meaning responses to science
teacher questions for instructional activities and materials that they can “use on
Monday,” the result has been a dependency that has become a countervailing
force to Cremin’s point (and also my themes in this book) of preparing men and
women who understand both the substance of science teaching and the theories
behind the particular strategies they employ. It is past time to reduce teachers’
dependence on short-term quick fixes and develop long-term knowledge and
skills that will indeed empower their science teaching.
Science teachers could, at this point, accurately ask—What are the qualities
of empowerment? In a book titled Leaders: The Strategies for Taking Charge, Warren
Bennis and Burt Nanus (1985) described several dimensions of empowerment.
One of the first dimensions is significance. Effective leaders create a vision that
makes others feel as though they make a difference. Of critical importance, the
significance has substance and transcends the superficial significance of slogans.
The individuals are, for example, translating the vision into innovative science
programs and sustaining the new programs. Science teachers indeed would be
making a difference in the education of their students.
A second dimension of empowerment involves developing new knowledge,
skills, and beliefs. This results in greater competence and a sense of mastery. Third,
empowerment provides a sense of community. For example, when all the science
teachers in a school system have the common purpose of improving science
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