This book examines how to develop effective teaching for meaningful
learning in science. It identifies how teachers interpret difficult
ideas in science and, in particular, what supports their own learning in
coming to a professional understanding of how to teach science concepts
to young children. The book investigates how such professional insight
emerges in the process of teachers identifying those elements that
support their understanding during their own learning. In this paradigm,
professional awareness derives from the practitioner interrogating their
own learning and identifying implications for their teaching of science.
The book draws on a significant body of critically analyzed empirical
evidence collated and documented over a five year period involving large
numbers of trainee and practicing teachers.