This edited volume brings together a state-of-the-art collection of leading and emergent research on the burgeoning topic of science identities. It sets out how science identity can be productively used as a lens in understanding patterns and inequalities in science participation across different educational and international contexts. Its chapters reveal how intersections of social identities and inequalities shape participation and engagement in science. Particular attention is given to explicating issues of theory and method, identifying the potential and limitations of approaches and lacunae in existing knowledge. The book showcases research from a range of disciplinary areas, employing diverse methodological and conceptual approaches to investigate science identities across different fields and settings. The collection offers a rich and comprehensive understanding of how science identity can be used conceptually, methodologically and analytically to understand how learners and teachers relate to, and make sense of, science. It’s a valuable resource for students, researchers and academics in the field of science education and anyone who is interested in identity and education.
Part
1. Introduction.
Chapter
1. Understanding and contextualizing the
field of science identity research (Heidi B. Carlone).- Part
2. Student
Science Identities outside and inside school.
Chapter
2. My Love For It
Just Wasnt Enough to Get Me Through: A Longitudinal Case Study of Factors
Supporting and Denying Black British Working-Class Young Womens Science
Identities and Trajectories (Louise Archer).
Chapter
3. It was always about
relationships and it was awesome: Girls performing gender and identity in
an out-of-school-time science conversation club (Allison Gonsalves).
Chapter
4. Young womens identity work in relation to physics at the transition from
school to further educational pathways (Thorid Rabe).
Chapter
5. Student
identity, aspiration and the exchange-value of physics (Billy Wong).- Part
3.
Student science identities in higher education.
Chapter
6. Science talent
and unlimited devotion: An investigation of the dynamics of university
students scienceidentities through the lens of gendered conceptualisations
of talent (Henriette Tolstrup Holmegaard).
Chapter
7. Doing geoscience:
negotiations of science identity among university students when learning in
the field (Lene Møller Madsen).
Chapter
8. Identity perspectives in research
on university physics education what is the problem represented to be?
(Anders Johansson).- Part
4. Science teachers identities and practices.-
Chapter
9. Exploring the Connections Between Student-Teacher-Administration
Science Identities in Urban Settings (Rachel Askew).
Chapter
10. Science
Teacher Identity Work in Colonized and Racialized Spaces (Gale Seiler).-
Chapter
11. Understanding Science Teacher Identity Development within the
Figured Worlds of Schools (Gail Richmond).
Chapter
12. Identities in Action:
Opportunities and Risks of Identity Work in Community & Citizen Science
(Colin G. Dixon).- Part
5. Multi-layered methodological approaches to science
identities.
Chapter
13. Using QualitativeMetasynthesis to Understand the
Factors that Contribute to Science Identity Development Across Contexts in
Secondary and Post-Secondary Students from Underrepresented Groups (Sylvia M.
James Butterfield).
Chapter
14. Representing STEM identities as pragmatic
configurations (Ruurd Taconis).
Chapter
15. How Activity Frames Shape
Situated Identity Negotiation: Theoretical and Practical Insights from an
Informal Engineering Education Program (Smirla Ramos-Montañez).- Part
6.
Conclusion.
Chapter
16. Working towards Justice: Critical Next Steps in
Identity Studies in Science Education (Angela Calabrese Barton).
Henriette Tolstrup Holmegaard is an associate professor at the department of science education, University of Copenhagen. She holds a Ph.D. in Higher science education. Her research centers on students transitions, choices and identity-negotiations in relation to science and engineering across the educational system. Currently Henriette work dedicated on researching the inequalities that transcend science practices, cultures and spaces within different science disciplines from an equity perspective. Together with Louise Archer, Henriette was the co-founder of the ESERA special interest group in Science Identities. She has been engaged in NARST committee work and served as an associated editor of the journal JRST. Henriette is a key figure in forming a community for science identity researchers within science education. This book is a result of bringing different researchers within this field together. Louise Archer is the Karl Mannheim Professor of Sociology of Education at University College London and is co-chair of the Centre for Sociology of Education and Equity. She holds a PhD in Social Psychology. Her current research focuses on STEM educational identities and inequalities, particularly in relation to gender, social class and 'race'/ethnicity, across formal and informal learning settings. Louise has authored 100+ publications, including books and journals articles. She has worked extensively with STEM teachers and informal learning educators to support equitable STEM practice, for which she has been awarded a number of prizes. Together with Henriette T Holmegaard, Louise has was the co-founder of the ESERA special interest group in Science Identities.