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Standards for K-12 Engineering Education?

               18                                             STANDARDS FOR K–12 ENGINEERING EDUCATION?



               concepts and practices in engineering and to reflect current findings based on cognitive science.
               Standards could also inform the creation of new instructional materials and shape engineering
               teacher education programs.
                   For a subject new to most K–12 classrooms, standards can also make a statement about the
               importance of that subject for  students and for society at large.  Thus standards for K–12
               engineering education could help create an identity for engineering as a separate and important
               discipline in the overall curriculum on a par with more established disciplines.  This was an
               important goal, for example, of the technology education community when it developed the
               Standards for Technological Literacy (ITEA, 2000).  Ultimately, standards have the potential to
               expand the presence of high-quality, rigorous, relevant engineering education for K–12 students.
                   In working on this project, the committee collected and reviewed information about stan-
               dards and standards-like documents for precollege engineering education developed by other
               nations, including Australia, England and Wales, France, Germany, and South Africa (DeVries,
               2009; also see Appendix B).  Our efforts to draw meaningful inferences for education in the
               United States were hindered by differences among educational systems and difficulties in finding
               data on the extent and impact of standards.



                                  The Argument Against Engineering Content Standards

                   Perhaps the most serious argument against  developing content standards for K–12 engi-
               neering education is our limited experience with K–12 engineering education in elementary and
               secondary schools.  Although there has been a considerable increase in the last 5 to 10 years, the
               number of K–12 students, teachers, and schools  engaged in engineering education is still
               extremely small compared to the numbers for almost every other school subject.
                   For standards to have a chance of succeeding,  there must be a critical mass of teachers
               willing and able to deliver engineering instruction.  Although no precise threshold number has
               been determined, based on the committee’s experience with the development of standards in
               other subjects, 10 percent seems a reasonable minimum.  Based on the projected size of the
               teaching force in 2010 in the U.S. K–12 educational system, this would represent about 380,000
               teachers (NCES, 2008), a figure orders of magnitude larger than the estimated K–12 engineering
               teaching force.
                   The most recent data available indicate that 40 states have adopted or adapted the Standards
               for Technological Literacy.  Of these, 12 require students to take at least one technology educa-
               tion course (Dugger, 2007).  It is not clear, however, whether these state standards include the
               engineering content of the national technological literacy standards.  More important, the
               committee could find no reliable data indicating  how many states assess student learning in
               engineering.  Without the pressure of an assessment, particularly an assessment with conse-
               quences tied to student performance, teachers may have little incentive to teach engineering.
                   Another concern is mixed results for nationally developed consensus standards, which have
               demonstrably influenced the content of state education standards and curricula (e.g., DeBoer,
               2006), but have had varying impacts in different states.  Overall, this has led to well documented
               problems of a lack of coherence among standards, instructional practices, assessments and
               accountability, and teacher professional development (NAEd, 2009; Rothman, 2003).  Even
               when standards influence the content of a curriculum, the material that is actually taught—the
               enacted curriculum—is influenced much more  by teachers’ beliefs and experiences than by
               standards (Spillane, 2004; Weiss et al., 2003).








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