“…Teacher efficacy and the quality of the education they receive should be the focus to make all learners in all development fields reach the desired level, become a beneficial individual for their countries and for themselves, grow by having independent thought (Onder & Karatas, 2016;Degirmenci-Uysal, 2017). It is an accepted fact on the part of researchers that the relationship between teachers and teaching qualifications significantly affects society (Ozcan & Genc, 2016, Agranovich, Y., Amirova, A., Ageyeva, L., Lebedeva, L., Aldibekova, S., & Uaidullakyzy, E. 2019. The National Science Teachers Association (NSTA) recommends that the science education community supports twenty-first century skills -embedded in student outcomes and defined as creativity, innovation, critical thinking, problem solving, communication, collaboration, personal responsibility, global awareness, social/intercultural skills, team learning and mastery of rigorous academic content -consistent with the best practices across a science education system, including curriculum, pedagogy, science teacher preparation and teacher professional development (Zorluoglu, Kizilaslan, & Donmez Yapucuoglu, 2020;Bagila, Kok, Zhumabaeva, Suleimenova, Riskulbekova & Uaidullakyzy, 2019).…”