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Education Sciences

Education Sciences is an international, peer-reviewed, open access journal on education, published monthly online by MDPI.
The European Network of Sport Education (ENSE) is affiliated with Education Sciences and its members receive discounts on the article processing charges.
Quartile Ranking JCR - Q1 (Education and Educational Research)

All Articles (7,444)

Middle school is a critical period for science education, yet the collective impact of socialization agents on students’ longitudinal science learning trajectories and subsequent STEM careers remains underexplored. This study investigates how seventh-grade (typically aged 12–13) socialization agents—parental educational encouragement, peer academic support, constructive school learning environment, and student self-esteem—collectively shape the developmental growth trajectories of science performance throughout middle school and predict the attainment of a college STEM degree and later engagement in STEM professions in adulthood. Using five-wave longitudinal data from the Longitudinal Study of American Youth (LSAY, N = 3116), we employed latent growth curve modeling (LGCM) to analyze these relationships. Results indicated that all four grade-7 socialization agents significantly predicted a higher initial level of science achievement. In addition, parental encouragement and a constructive school learning environment also predicted a positive growth rate of science achievement. Furthermore, both the initial level and growth of science performance significantly predicted successful graduation with a STEM degree. These middle school science trajectories, along with obtaining a STEM degree, sequentially mediated the relationships between the grade-7 socialization agents and adult STEM career engagement. The findings underscore the necessity of educational policies and interventions that foster a synergistic pro-learning socialization context in middle school to bolster students’ science education and pave the way for long-term STEM success.

21 January 2026

Graphic display of the hypothesized longitudinal relationships between grade-7 socialization agents, students’ developmental and growth trajectories of science performance in middle school, and STEM development in adulthood. Note: The H1a to H3 hypotheses represent direct effects, and the H4a to H5d hypotheses in parentheses are the indirect effects. ScPerf is students’ science performance in middle school. The measures of students’ integrated science performance scores from grade 7 to grade 9 are treated as the multiple indicators to project the developmental and growth trajectories of students’ science performance during middle school, in which they are all fixed to 1 and loaded on the intercept factor to represent the developmental trajectory of students’ science performance in middle school, and are set as [0, 1, 2] for the equal time intervals and loaded on the slope factor to connote the growth trajectory of students’ science performance across middle school. More detailed explanations of the modeling procedures are discussed in the section ‘Modeling Procedures’.

Creating Dialogic Spaces in STEM Education: A Comparative Study of Ground Rules

  • Imogen Casebourne,
  • Nigel Calder and
  • Cynthia James
  • + 2 authors

This article reports on a comparative case study that examined the ground rules used to facilitate a dialogic space in two discrete and diverse research studies: Year 5 & 6 children learning to code with ScratchMaths as part of their mathematics programmes, and crop farmers in rural east Africa developing their practice through various communications. The intention was to see if there were common actions or principles important for the establishment of ground rules in dialogic spaces in general. Understanding the nature of dialogic space has become increasingly important in many areas of education. STEM subjects, particularly when integrated, frequently involve collaborative interaction, and utilise a dialogical approach. Some initial aspects of ground rules were collaboratively identified, with both studies then independently analysed to identify emerging themes related to these ground rules. Several key elements emerged: developing the processes for interaction and communication; developing trust between participants; developing respectful dialogue; teacher roles; and facilitating collaborative work and the co-construction of meaning. The comparative case study suggested that these were important for other education work when establishing dialogic space.

21 January 2026

Five key elements, through three themes and one central aspect that emerged.

Teachers’ language assessment literacy (LAL) encompasses the knowledge and competencies required to design and implement assessment practices that support learning. Although prior research has documented general trends in LAL development, less is known about how individual teachers, particularly student teachers, interpret, appropriate, and negotiate formative assessment (FA) task design within the context of initial teacher education (ITE). Adopting an in-depth qualitative case study approach, this study examines how a single student teacher in a Chinese initial teacher education developed her cognition and classroom practice related to FA tasks across a teaching methodology course and a practicum. Drawing on thematic analysis of semi-structure interviews, lesson plans, classroom observations, stimulated recall interviews, and reflective journals, the study traces developmental changes and the contextual factors shaping the student teacher’s LAL in relation to FA tasks. Findings show that the sustained engagement with FA task design supported more sophisticated understandings of FA, including (1) an increased recognition of the pedagogical necessity of incorporating authentic FA tasks into lesson planning, (2) a growing aspiration to implement FA-oriented instruction that promotes higher-order thinking, (3) an enhanced awareness of the empowering role of FA tasks in fostering students’ self-regulated learning, and (4) a more nuanced understanding of the challenges inherent in implementing FA practices. Meanwhile, the case illustrates how pre-existing assessment conceptions, school culture norms, and limited targeted mentoring can constrain LAL development in relation to FA. By providing a fine-grained account of developmental processes, this study offers insights into how ITE can mediate student teachers’ engagement with FA task design. The findings have implications for teacher education programs in other similar educational contexts, particularly regarding the integration of FA task design into assessment courses and the provision of sustained, context-sensitive support during teaching practicum.

21 January 2026

Formative Writing Task example from Tracy’s lesson plan.

Never before has the role of the federal government in underwriting U.S. higher education been more visible than in the early months of the second Trump Administration. The Administration’s aggressive anti-DEI and anti-science attacks have exposed the reliance within higher education, especially among research institutions, on federal grantmaking infrastructure. In this paper, we use the (e)quality politics framework to analyze the Trump Administration’s attack on federal grantmaking infrastructure as well as the response and/or resistance from targeted institutions and concerned advocates. Bringing this theoretical model into conversation with present-day empirics allows us to not only parse the underlying, racialized ideology of these political moves but to surface political and practical insights for organized resistance.

21 January 2026

(E)Quality Politics Then and Now.

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Educ. Sci. - ISSN 2227-7102