Epilogue Science Teachers as 21st-Century leaders
tHE tEACHING OF SCIENCE: 21 st-CENTURY PERSPECTIVES 161
A New Answer to the Sisyphean Question in Science Education
Hardly a day passes without a new report signaling the need for education
reform. Throughout our history, society has continually demonstrated the need
for education reform, so in one sense there is nothing new in the early decades of
the 21st century. Contemporary calls for reform consistently reference reactions
during the Sputnik era. The need for a response is accurate. However, it is now
more than 50 years since Sputnik, and as the needs of society are different, so
must the science education community’s response be different.
All of us—educators, scientists, policy makers, and the business commu-
nity—must ask and answer the perennial Sisyphean question for science educa-
tion: What should citizens know, value, and be able to do in preparation for life
and work in the 21st century?
Themes and discussions in this book have described my responses to the
Sisyphean question. I have tried to address the issue of reform at the most funda-
mental level, that of the science teacher and classroom instruction. Now, I turn to
the challenge of science teachers as 21st-century leaders.
Leadership
Leadership as discussed here is not that of a single great person. My point of
view includes a majority of individuals in science education who can provide
leadership, especially those with responsibilities for the teaching of science.
The vast and varied structure of science education and the scale and compli-
cated nature of contemporary reform suggest that distributed leadership is
essential. All individuals associated with science education must contribute to
the common purpose of achieving scientific literacy for all students.
The themes of leadership and responsibility in reforming science educa-
tion include the roles of teacher educators, science coordinators, science educa-
tion researchers, and classroom teachers. Science teachers clearly have the
greatest burden and heaviest responsibility for reform. Science teachers should
not perceive this judgment as yet another form of teacher bashing. Rather, my
comments are grounded in recognition of the essential and fundamental position
of teachers in education, the need for reform, and a deep and sincere compassion
for science teachers’ difficult task.
Defining Leadership
Leadership is difficult to define. Several definitions are provided on the next
page. Common themes unite under the theme of leadership. First, leadership
involves relationships with other individuals. Second, leadership has the inten-
tion of achieving a goal common to the group. I can paraphrase an earlier publi-
cation in which I defined leadership as an individual ability to work with others
to improve science teaching and student learning while achieving the goal of
scientific literacy (Bybee 1993).
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