ABSTRACT

In many countries, questions are being raised about the quality and value of educational research. This book explores the relationship between research and practice in education. It looks at the extent to which current practice could be said to be informed by knowledge or ideas generated by research and at the extent to which the use of current practices or the adoption of new ones are, or could be, supported by research evidence. Science education is used as a case study but the issues considered apply to the teaching and learning of any curriculum subject.

The book draws on the findings of four inter-related research studies and considers:

  • how research might be used to establish greater consensus about curriculum;
  • how research can inform the design of assessment tools and teaching interventions;
  • teachers’ and other science educators’ perceptions of the influence of research on their teaching practices and their students’ learning;
  • the extent to which evidence can show that an educational practice ‘works’.

 

part I|23 pages

What is the issue?

part II|127 pages

What does the research tell us?

chapter Chapter 2|17 pages

Specifying curriculum goals

Less of an art, more of a science?

chapter Chapter 5|21 pages

Implementing and evaluating teaching interventions

Towards research evidence-based practice?

chapter Chapter 7|17 pages

Teaching ‘ideas about science’

The role of research in improving practice

chapter Chapter 8|18 pages

From evidence to impact

Users' perceptions of research and its influence on their practices

part III|26 pages

What are the overall implications?

chapter Chapter 9|24 pages

Improving practice in subject teaching

The contribution of research