Shulman was born on September 28, 1938, in Chicago, Illinois.[1] He was the only son of Jewish immigrants who owned a small delicatessen on the Northwest Side of Chicago.[2] He attended a Yeshiva high school[3] and married Judy Horwitz in 1960.[4] He completed his bachelors (1959), masters (1960), and PhD (1963) at the University of Chicago, where Joseph Schwab and Benjamin Bloom were among the faculty who influenced his thinking and research interests.[5][6]
Shulman is also recognized for his publications and speeches about the higher education field of the scholarship of teaching and learning (SoTL). He notably distinguished SoTL from scholarly teaching, which he described as the work "every one of us should be engaged in every day that we are in a classroom, in our office with students, tutoring, lecturing, conducting discussions, all the roles we play pedagogically."[21] SoTL, on the other hand, is "when we step back and reflect systematically on the teaching we have done, in a form that can be publicly reviewed and built upon by our peers."[21] This emphasis on public review and developing a collective body of knowledge was tied to his larger point that SoTL removes the widespread experience of "pedagogical solitude" by relocating postsecondary teaching within "a community of scholars."[21] This, in turn, will elevate the status of teaching in higher education and expand what's known about teaching and learning in higher education. Shulman died on December 30, 2024, at the age of 86.[22]
Pedagogical content knowledge (PCK)
Shulman introduced the concept of "pedagogical content knowledge". Shulman (1986) claimed that the emphases on teachers' subject matter knowledge and pedagogy were being treated as mutually exclusive. He believed that teacher education programs should combine the two knowledge fields. To address this dichotomy, he introduced the notion of pedagogical content knowledge that includes pedagogical knowledge and content knowledge, among other categories. His initial description of teacher knowledge included curriculum knowledge, and knowledge of educational contexts.
Select publications
Shulman, Lee S. (1986). Those who understand: Knowledge growth in teaching. Educational Researcher, 15(2), 4–14.
Shulman, Lee S. (1987). Knowledge and teaching: Foundations of the new reform. Harvard Educational Review, 57(1), 1–22.
Shulman, Lee S. (2004). Teaching as community property: Essays on higher education. Jossey-Bass.
Shulman, Lee S. (2004). The wisdom of practice: Essays on teaching, learning, and learning to teach. Jossey-Bass.
^Baptiste, H. Prentice; Leck, Mika C. (2022). "Lee S. Shulman: An Icon of Teaching". In Geier, Brett A. (ed.). The Palgrave Handbook of Educational Thinkers. pp. 1831–1840.
^"AACTE Awards"(PDF). American Association of Colleges of Teacher Education. 2024. Archived from the original(PDF) on 4 December 2023. Retrieved 2024-11-28.
^ abcShulman, Lee S. (2004). Teaching as community property: Essays on higher education. Jossey-Bass/Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching (1 ed.). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass. ISBN978-0-470-62308-4.
Ma, Liping (2010). Knowing and teaching elementary mathematics: Teachers' understanding of fundamental mathematics in China and the United States (Anniversary ed.). New York: Routledge. ISBN978-0415873840.
Munby, Hugh; Russell, Tom; Martin, Andrea K. (2002). Richardson, Virginia (ed.). Handbook of research on teaching (4th ed.). Washington, D.C.: American Educational Research Association. pp. 877–904. ISBN978-0935302264.
Palmer, Joy A.; Bresler, Liora; Cooper, David E., eds. (2003). Fifty modern thinkers on education: from Piaget to the present (Repr. ed.). London: Routledge. ISBN978-0415224093.