Challenging the Hegemony of Western Scientism in Science Teacher Education

IF 2.1 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH Journal of Science Teacher Education Pub Date : 2022-10-03 DOI:10.1080/1046560X.2022.2112130
Wayne Melville, G. Verma, T. Campbell, Byung-Yeol Park
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引用次数: 2

Abstract

In 2017, in putting together our application to the Publications Committee for the positions of Co-Editors in Chief, we (Melville, Verma, and Campbell) set out the key priorities that we wanted to pursue if granted the stewardship of the Journal of Science Teacher Education (JSTE). Building on the influential work of our predecessors, Judy and Norm Lederman, we stated that we wanted to extend the global reach of the journal and increase the impact of non-North American science teacher education scholars within the science education literature. Now we are the Co-Editors of the journal, and as we enter the final 17 months of our fiveyear appointment, we can report on our progress in pursuing this key priority. Since 2019, the number of submissions from authors at institutions outside of the United States has increased from 50.9% (116 submissions), to 55.6% (142 submissions) in 2020, and 59.3% (143 submissions) in 2021. If we used this as a valid metric for extending the global reach of JSTE, we could claim to have been successful. Such a claim would be hollow, however, for even as the international reach of the journal has increased as depicted by the number of submissions to JSTE, we have become increasingly troubled by the naivete of our original priority. This feeling was initially based on the acceptance rates that we were seeing for submissions from outside the United States. At the time of writing, 14.7% of the 2019 submissions, 18.3% of the 2020 submissions, and 12.6% of the 2021 submissions have been published, or are still in process. All these percentages are below the acceptance rates for the journal, which has averaged 30.1% over the past three years. Certainly, language continues to be a barrier for some submissions, and we continue to work with the Publications Committee to address this. Over time, however, we also came to believe that other forces were in play—forces that we initially struggled to identify. What we have too slowly come to realize is that simply extending the “global reach” of the journal does not equate to the opening of opportunities to learn from other visions of science teacher education that can, and do, develop and prosper in other cultures. More importantly, we now understand that “If science spaces continue to operate through dominant cultural norms and values, merely providing access to materials or opportunities to participate in science will not make the kind of changes we seek” (Kayumova & Dou, 2022, p. 17). While we thought we understood what we wanted to achieve, and we acted with the most noble of intentions, we have to admit that we have fundamentally failed to challenge the hegemony of scientism in relation
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挑战西方科学主义在科学教师教育中的霸权
2017年,在向出版委员会申请联合主编职位时,我们(Melville、Verma和Campbell)提出了如果获得《科学教师教育杂志》(JSTE)的管理权,我们希望追求的关键优先事项。在我们的前任Judy和Norm Lederman有影响力的工作的基础上,我们表示,我们希望扩大该杂志的全球影响力,并增加非北美科学教师教育学者在科学教育文献中的影响力。现在,我们是该杂志的联合编辑,在我们五年任期的最后17个月,我们可以报告我们在追求这一关键优先事项方面的进展。自2019年以来,美国以外机构的作者提交的材料数量从50.9%(116份)增加到2020年的55.6%(142份)和2021年的59.3%(143份)。如果我们将此作为扩大JSTE全球覆盖范围的有效指标,我们可以宣称已经取得了成功。然而,这样的说法是空洞的,因为正如向JSTE提交的稿件数量所示,尽管该杂志的国际影响力有所增加,但我们对最初优先事项的天真感到越来越不安。这种感觉最初是基于我们看到的来自美国以外提交的接受率。在撰写本文时,2019年提交的14.7%、2020年提交的18.3%和2021年提交的12.6%已发表或仍在进行中。所有这些百分比都低于该杂志的接受率,该杂志在过去三年中的平均接受率为30.1%。当然,语言仍然是一些提交材料的障碍,我们将继续与出版物委员会合作解决这一问题。然而,随着时间的推移,我们也开始相信其他力量也在发挥作用——我们最初很难识别这些力量。我们慢慢意识到的是,仅仅扩大该杂志的“全球影响力”并不等于打开机会,学习其他能够在其他文化中发展和繁荣的科学教师教育愿景。更重要的是,我们现在明白,“如果科学空间继续通过主导的文化规范和价值观运作,仅仅提供获取材料或参与科学的机会将不会做出我们所寻求的那种改变”(Kayumova&Dou,2022,第17页)。虽然我们认为我们理解我们想要实现的目标,并且我们怀着最高尚的意图行事,但我们必须承认,我们从根本上未能挑战科学主义在
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来源期刊
Journal of Science Teacher Education
Journal of Science Teacher Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
4.90
自引率
10.50%
发文量
41
期刊介绍: Journal of Science Teacher Education (JSTE) is the flagship journal of the Association for Science Teacher Education. It serves as a forum for disseminating high quality research and theoretical position papers concerning preservice and inservice education of science teachers. The Journal features pragmatic articles that offer ways to improve classroom teaching and learning, professional development, and teacher recruitment and retention at pre K-16 levels.
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