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Superintendent: Teachers Need More Training in Science, Math

Better trained teachers can help prepare students for modern jobs, say state and county officials.

By Krystal Nancoo-Russell, Capital News Service

Teachers need more training to help students learn key science, technology, engineering and math skills, Maryland’s school superintendent said Tuesday.

“One of the things we have to do as a school system -- and we’re taking full responsibility of that -- is look at the ways that we are preparing our professionals to train our students,” superintendent Lillian Lowery said at a forum on STEM education in Washington.

Especially in middle schools, where teachers are required to cover multiple subjects, Lowery said it is challenging to create professional development opportunities focused on those skills.

The teacher development program needs to be redesigned to incorporate more STEM skills, beginning with elementary school teachers, Andrew Zuckerman, associate superintendent for Prince George’s County Public Schools, said at the forum.

School districts need to make sure “that our teachers are well-prepared to teach science and math at a much more rigorous level,” Zuckerman said.

Teachers are not being prepared to teach STEM topics using modern technology that students are now accustomed to using, said Chad Womack, director of STEM education initiatives at the United Negro College Fund.

In 2012, for the fifth consecutive year, Education Week ranked Maryland’s public school system as the best in the country.  But Maryland schools are not as strong on science education.  Maryland 8th graders ranked 30th nationally on science proficiency in 2011, according to National Assessment for Educational Progress test data collected by the National Center for Education Statistics.  

Lowery said that new programs that standardize the curriculum for math, English and science that have been adopted in Maryland -- and by school systems nationwide -- will do a better job of preparing students for STEM majors in college.

Within Maryland counties, some schools do a better job of teaching science than others because of special programs.

“Our challenge is going to be even if we have pockets of excellence...how do we bring this to scale for every child,” Lowery said.

And every child must be reached, she said, because STEM knowledge is required for a range of modern jobs, not just for careers in rocket science.  Jobs like plumbing and auto repair require an understanding of science and technology, too.  

“We have to start thinking about STEM in ways that are practical,” Lowery said.

Tell Us: Do you think Greenbelt teachers need more training?

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Betsy Marks Delaney June 12, 2013 at 12:08 pm
Considering the sorry state of sex education in schools today and parental reluctance for teachingRead More anything but abstinence (if they teach anything at all), I'd suggest that the sale shouldn't even be questioned. When we decide education means more than just saying "no," when boys and men learn that it's as much their responsibility as women's to avoid unprotected sex and that violence against women is wrong, and when we teach consequences along with abstinence, then perhaps the pill won't be necessary. I don't see that day coming for a long, long time. Now, if the course "Our Whole Lives" taught by Unitarian Universalists became standard education in every school, perhaps we wouldn't need emergency contraception. Education (knowledge) is power.
Pachacutec June 12, 2013 at 02:16 pm
Betsy, I agree with a lot of your post; many parents seem to feel that if they tell their childrenRead More about sex, it's the same as telling them to go out and do it. I'm willing to bet that more young people get into trouble by ignorance than by knowledge. (and I haven't read the text that you mentioned but yes, education/knowledge IS power).
Peggy Anne June 12, 2013 at 02:57 pm
By all means, give them the pill and let them stop trouble in its tracks. From that moment forward,Read More encourage them to find safer ways to have fun.
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