NSF Awards: 1439628
2019 (see original presentation & discussion)
Grades 6-8, Grades 9-12
Meet Denise Aquino, a Pacific University Noyce Scholar preparing to transform STEM for students in her home community.
Denise is the daughter of indigenous, rural, Mexican parents who immigrated to Oregon and live in the small community of Molalla. Molalla and the surrounding area are home to a vibrant Latinx community grounded in agricultural work and immigrant heritage. The teaching force, especially in STEM classrooms, is predominantly white and middle class.
Denise has been hired starting in Fall 2019 to be a middle school science teacher in Molalla. Many of Denise's students will experience, for the first time, having a STEM teacher of their own gender, culture, community, and language. They will see themselves in Denise, and see themselves in STEM
The Pacific Noyce program will continue to document Denise's teaching journey; look for us next year!
Daniel Capps
Associate Professor
A very compelling story about Denise. What are the plans to conduct case-based research on students like Denise to better understand the ways in which programs like the one at Pacific University can support such students? Also, are their plans to follow students like Denise into the classroom to better understand that long-term impacts of supporting programs like the one at PU?
Molly Stuhlsatz
Kevin Carr
Professor of Science Education
Thats a great question! Until now we have administered the usual surveys and interviews with our Noyce Alumni. However, starting this year, we are engaging in a series of case studies involving 4-6 of June 2019 graduates. The case studies will involve a series of in-depth interviews and classroom observation distributed throughout the first year of teaching, interviews with their administrators, and collection of classroom data including indications of student learning. The data will be used to find out where the holes are in our teacher preparation program, and to share with the hiring schools what holes they may have in supporting new teachers. Fortunately, we have solid partnerships in place to make this work happen.
Molly Stuhlsatz
Robin Jones
I'm not very familiar with the Noyce program, beyond the basic mission of encouraging strong undergrad STEM majors to go into teaching. I couldn't tell in the video if Denise was working with other Noyce scholars, in-service teachers, high school students or others. I'd love to know more about how the Noyce experience might help teachers stay in teaching once they begin.
Kevin Carr
Professor of Science Education
Hi Robin! Denise is about to finish up the teacher preparation program, which means for the past year she has been working to become a science teacher. We have a cohort of 10 Noyce Scholars. What is exciting about Denise's story is that her background equips her with what we refer to as "Funds of Knowledge" with which to connect with the students in her own community where she will be teaching starting next year. Not only will she connect uniquely with the students who share some of her journey, culture, and language, she is more likely tp be successful and continue teaching long-term in her rural, small-town setting than the average science teacher that would get hired from outside of the community. She represents the science teacher high-needs communities need.
Robin Jones
Molly Stuhlsatz
Research Scientist
Thanks so much for sharing your project and particularly highlighting Denise's story. Denise mentioned that she worked with a mentor. I'd love to hear more about the mentoring model. How do you work through the process of matching students with mentors? Do you collect any data from mentors about the impact of the program?
Kevin Carr
Professor of Science Education
Thanks for the note! Denise works with mentors in a couple of different senses: First, Denise worked in clinical teaching practice (also known as student teaching) with two different mentor teachers (MT's) during the school year. Her MT during the first half of the year was a middle school math teacher who I encouraged to work with Denise because she, like Denise, is a bilingual Latina. The second half the year Denise's MT was a veteran science teacher at the district alternative school, someone who truly understands culturally responsive practice and was able to support Denise's journey to explore how story telling and student "funds of knowledge" might be leveraged in the science classroom.
Secondly, Denise will be assigned a school district mentor. As a small district they will struggle, however, to provide an ideal amount of support. To augment what her district will provide, our Noyce program will maintain close contact since the district is in a small town just a few miles away.
Thanks!
Molly Stuhlsatz
Courtney Arthur
Senior Curriculum and Instruction Designer
Thank you for sharing this work- what a great story. I would love to hear more about the opportunities that Noyce provides!
Sue Jacobs
I enjoyed your video as the perspective on one of your students.
Kevin Carr
Professor of Science Education
Thanks! We hope that this story captures the essence of what we are working toward--providing students with the STEM teachers they need!
Further posting is closed as the event has ended.