ABSTRACT

Educational research has examined how students elaborate models in the science classroom (Janvier & Lapointe, 1998; Tiberghien, 1994), as well as the role and function of teachers' tutoring during students' modeling activities (Franceschelli & Weil-Barais, 1998; Janvier & Lapointe, 1998; Larcher & Chomat, 1998). However, relatively little research has been carried out on the processes by which teachers come to understand how students model, or on how teachers can be helped to leam how students model, as part of their training. These questions form an essential initial approach but remain separate from the question involving to what extent teachers actually integrate what they have leamed during their training into their professional practice. In a research program that aims to contribute to teaching teachers how students model, such a question should be addressed subsequently in order to evaluate if and how teachers put the information they gain on students' modeling into practice. The assumption here is that teaching teachers about how students model is successful if the teacher-leamers can fruitfully bring to bear this new knowledge on their practice.