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Responding to a relevance imperative in school science and mathematics: Humanising the curriculum through story

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 09:26 authored by Linda Darby
There has been a recent push to reframe curriculum and pedagogy in ways that make school more meaningful and relevant to students' lives and perceived needs. This 'relevance imperative' is evident in contemporary rhetoric surrounding quality education, and particularly in relation to the junior secondary years where student disengagement with schooling continues to abate. This paper explores how teachers translate this imperative into their mathematics and science teaching. Interview data and critical incidents from classroom practice are used to explore how six teachers attempted to make the subject matter meaningful for their students. Four 'Categories of Meaning Making' emerged, highlighting key differences in how the nature of science and mathematics content constrained or enabled linkages between content and students' lifeworlds. While the teachers demonstrated a commitment to humanising the subject at some level, this analysis has shown that expecting teachers to make the curriculum relevant is not unproblematic because the meaning of relevance as a construct is complex, subject-specific, and embedded in understanding the human dimensions of learning, using, and identifying with, content. Through an examination of the construct of relevance and a humanistic turn in mathematics and science literature I argue for an expanded notion of relevance.

History

Journal

Research in Science Education

Volume

43

Issue

1

Start page

77

End page

97

Total pages

21

Publisher

Springer

Place published

Dordretch

Language

English

Copyright

© Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2011

Former Identifier

2006026215

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2011-09-23

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