CTE Teachers' Perspectives on the Process of CTE and Science Content Integration: A Grounded Theory
by Spindler, Matthew Kenneth, Ph.D., UNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA, 2011, 198 pages; 3482280

Abstract:

The integration of career and technical education (CTE) and academic curricular content that capitalizes on natural and inherent connections represents a challenge for CTE professionals. The research question that was used to guide the current study was: What are CTE teachers’ perspectives of and experiences with the process of CTE and science content integration? And more specifically, to generate a grounded theory which explicates the process of CTE and science content integration from the perspective of CTE teachers.

The CTE teachers expressed that the process of CTE and science content integration was a process of evolutionizing. From the perspective of the CTE teachers involved integrating CTE and science content resulted in their programs of study being adapted into something different than they were before the process of integration was begun. The CTE teachers revealed that the evolutions in their programs of study and themselves were associated with three other categories within the grounded theory: (a) connecting; (b) enacting; and (c) futuring. The process of CTE and science content integration represents a deep and complex episode for CTE teachers. The process of CTE and science content integration requires connecting to others, putting ideas into action, and an orienting towards the future.

 
AdvisersBradley Greiman; Roland Peterson
SchoolUNIVERSITY OF MINNESOTA
SourceDAI/A 73-03, p. , Dec 2011
Source TypeDissertation
SubjectsAgriculture education; Science education; Vocational education
Publication Number3482280
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