You're Invited!

STEM-E(RC)2 October 2022 Speaker Series

featuring Dr. Mihwa Park and Dr. María González-Howard

The upcoming presentations will feature Dr. Mihwa Park, Assistant Professor of STEM education at Texas Tech University and Dr. María González-Howard, Assistant Professor of STEM education at the University of Texas at Austin. These events are hosted by the University of Texas at Arlington College of Education.

Title: Misery Creates Company: Female Student-Developed Support Systems in Physics Classes

Students’ difficulty in understanding scientific concepts has been extensively reported in the body of literature. Within this area, learning science is often viewed as a cognitive process while emotions are temporal reactions to events as byproducts. Further, students’ negative emotions are usually considered an impediment to learning and rational thinking. In this talk, I will discuss how female students’ emotions affect their learning and doing of science and their feelings of belonging in an inquiry-based physics class. I will also discuss how teachers can help students engage in their activities and feel safe talking in physics class. 


About Mihwa

Mihwa Park is an Assistant Professor of STEM education at Texas Tech University (TTU). She earned her Ph.D. in Science Education from the University at Buffalo. Before joining TTU, she was a post-doctoral research associate at Michigan State University and then transitioned to a faculty position at the University at Buffalo, where she worked for three years. Her research interests involve 1) science and STEM teacher education with a focus on teachers’ emotions about teaching, formative assessment practices, and reflective thinking, 2) students’ conceptual understanding of science concepts and their academic emotions in learning and doing science, and 3) formative assessments integrated into science learning activities. 

RSVP for Free
Headshot of Dr. Maria Gonzales-Howard

Title: Developing elementary preservice teachers’ abilities to notice and leverage multilingual students’ language use for scientific sensemaking.

What counts as language and how is language used for scientific sensemaking? Narrow views of both language and science practices have perpetuated inequities in science education for multilingual students. In this talk, Dr. González-Howard adopts a translanguaging lens to unpack how language and languaging is central for scientific sensemaking via science practices. She will illustrate these ideas through research work and findings from a five-year National Science Foundation CAREER grant that she is leading focused on preparing elementary preservice teachers to support multilingual students’ engagement in science practices.


About Maria

Dr. María González-Howard is an Assistant Professor in STEM Education at The University of Texas at Austin. Her research explores the intersections of multilingualism, scientific sensemaking, and teacher education, with a specific focus on the ways multilingual students engage in science practices through translanguaging. She holds a B.A in Physics from Ithaca College, a Ed.M. in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages from Boston University, and a Ph.D. in Science Education from Boston College. Before pursuing her graduate studies, she was a middle school science teacher in general and sheltered English instruction classrooms in both Texas and Massachusetts. Currently, she is a leading a five-year National Science Foundation CAREER grant focused on preparing elementary preservice teachers to support multilingual students’ engagement in science practices.

RSVP for Free

Event Details

What: STEM-E(RC)2 October 2022 Speaker Series

When: Noon - 1:30 p.m., Oct. 19, 2022 and Oct. 26, 2022

Where009 and 010 Trimble Hall, located at 700 S. West St. Arlington, TX, 76010 on the UTA campus. To access the center, take the elevators located in the Trimble-Hammond Hall Complex down to Floor B. (An option to join virtually is also available.)

Cost: The event is free, but registration is required.

RSVP Herehttps://forms.office.com/r/pM4t2vQULT

COLLEGE OF EDUCATION
THE UNIVERSITY OF TEXAS AT ARLINGTON
P.O. Box 19227 | 701 Planetarium Place | Arlington, TX 76019-0227