Abstract
Geoscience education is, itself, a dynamical sub-system in the science,
technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) learning ecosystem. Both
the larger STEM environment and the geoscience ecosystem are shaped by
the ever-changing relationships among people, places, science content
(and its communication), teaching practices, and shifting roles for each
of these. In answer to calls in the literature for research on
professional learning in which the faculty member is central to the
process of change, the study reported here addressed the question: What
is the nature of college science faculty readiness for change in
instructional practices? The setting was a professional development
experience in oceanography/marine science and paleoclimatology among 32
faculty from 2- and 4-year colleges. Ten of the 32 participated in
interviews and all provided survey responses and documents used in
analysis. Qualitative research methods resulted in three example cases
to illustrate a new framework for exploring faculty readiness for
professional change in teaching. This framework blends the Clarke and
Hollingsworth (2002) model of a professional change environment with
research from health sciences on readiness for behavioral change (Dalton
& Gottlieb, 2003). From the first model came the multi-part foundation
of personal, external, professional, and consequence domains of
experience and from the second came how an instructor draws on those
domains to: (a) see an instructional challenge as requiring intentional
action to be resolved; (b) notice new significance (for the instructor)
in some aspect of instructional practice; (c) feel able to manage
instructional stressors/challenges; (d) have commitment to
initiate/sustain change; (e) perceive adequate support in undertaking
change. Three profiles of readiness for change are represented by three
composite instructor cases named Lee, Pat, and Chris. In the case of
Lee, factor c drove change efforts, for Pat, factors a and b were in the
forefront, and for Chris it was factors d and e. Building a healthy
learning ecosystem includes attention to faculty as learners. The three
cases are valuable both as illustrations of the framework in use and as
touchstones for future research and development related to
post-secondary professional learning for teaching.