Preface Peter Gilroy Introduction – Teaching STEM education through dialogue and transformative learning: global significance and local interactions in Mexico and the UK Catherine Montgomery and Juan Manuel Fernández-Cárdenas (England and Mexico) 1. The social construction of a Teacher Support Team: an experience of university lecturers’ professional development in STEM Elvia Castro-Félix and Harry Daniels (Mexico and England) 2. Developing a material-dialogic approach to pedagogy to guide science teacher education Lindsay Hetherington and Rupert Wegerif (England) 3. Creating a dialogic environment for transformative science teaching practices: towards an inclusive education for science Cristina G. Reynaga-Peña, Marisol Sandoval-Ríos, José Torres-Frías, Carolina López-Suero, Adrián Lozano Garza, Maribel Dessens Félix, Marcelino González Maitland and Jorge G. Ibanez (Mexico) 4. STEM outreach activities: an approach to teachers’ professional development Farzana Aslam, Arinola Adefila and Yamuna Bagiya (England) 5. The role of non-formal contexts in teacher education for STEM: the case of horno3 science and technology interactive centre Claudia Fernández-Limón, Juan Manuel Fernández-Cárdenas and Alma Adrianna Gómez Galindo (Mexico) 6. Public dialogue with science and development for teachers of STEM: linking public dialogue with pedagogic praxis Richard Watermeyer and Catherine Montgomery (England) 7. Innovating science teaching with a transformative learning model Sandra Gudiño Paredes (Mexico) 8. A hybrid and flipped version of an introductory mathematics course for higher education N. Patricia Salinas Martínez and Eliud Quintero Rodríguez (Mexico) 9. Developing non-formal education competences as a complement of formal education for STEM lecturers Roy Alonso Terrazas-Marín (Mexico)