Download - Quinn & vorster heltasa 2014
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Practising what we preach in a course on teaching for lecturers
Lynn Quinn & Jo-Anne Vorster
Heltasa 2014
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Diversity• Range of institutional types
• English not 1st language
• Range of disciplinary qualifications (diploma to PhD)
• Few have any teaching qualifications
• Multiple fields and disciplines (Certificates to PhDs; practice-based, professional, academic)
• Structural and cultural conditions of home institutions influences kind of T & L
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Contextual changes similar to those lecturers face …
We emphasise the need to accommodate the diverse needs of students in the education process to ensure that it is “aligned with the students’ legitimate learning needs” (Scott 2009:10)
Are we practicing what we preach?
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Assessment
• Struggling to enter alien discourse community
• Need to demonstrate in writing enhanced practice through engagement with course processes
Are we practicing what we preach and ensuring that participants are able to demonstrate their learning adequately in writing?
Reflective tools (Stierer 2008) to better understand participants’ challenges. Key features of written discourse:
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Critically reflexive practitioner
Criticality
Reflexivity
Praxis
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Criticality •Use ideas, theories and
concepts from HES to think differently about their context and with a critical orientation
• Reading of texts
• Academic argument
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Criticality• Difficulty in moving from summarising ideas in
texts to reviewing ideas
• Tendency to provide verbatim reproduction/plagiarism
• Tend to draw from a narrow range of theories
• Understand criticality to mean criticising or finding fault rather than evaluating, comparing, contrasting
• Difficulty in constructing logical academic arguments (description rather than analysis)
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Reflexivity
“a growing recognition of the important relationship between self-awareness and learning, and between personal values and professional practice” (Stierer 2008:39)
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Reflexivity• Reluctance to use ‘I’ and write in the active voice;
• Avoid discussing practice; lack of confidence in practice
• Difficult to critique practice without becoming defensive
• Only able to describe contextual constraints
• Intention to learn and shift practice not always evident
• Anecdotes, storytelling and examples – difficulty in moving to principles
• Tendency to be prescriptive or normative
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“Academic practices are premised on conscious reflection on the ends, objects and means of activity (Anderson 1993) and involve forms of reasoning, analysis, modes of investigation and self reflection which enable the critical examination of established truths, taken-for-granted assumptions and knowledge handed down by tradition. Thus a truly responsive pedagogy must enable students to grasp the point of the practice and to develop the powers to work towards it” (Slonimsky & Shalem 2004:83)
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Praxis: linking theory and practice
Bringing together criticality and reflexivity
Think and write about teaching and learning in ways which will lead to improved or transformed practice
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Praxis• Difficulty in linking concepts, theories and ideas to
their practice
• Difficulty in understanding how various concepts form a complex structure of meaning (e.g. learning as both a social and an individual process)
• Difficulty with ‘display writing’ and demonstrating a move away from commonsense understandings
• Difficulty with structuring and effective movement between theory and practice in writing
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The curriculum and the pedagogy of the course do not provide
sufficient opportunities for all participants to develop the
criticality, reflexivity and praxis required by the assessment of the
course.
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Curriculum & pedagogy for fostering criticality, reflexivity and praxis?
• Each of these ways of engagement with theory and practice needs to be taught more explicitly, systematically, and separately (initially) to enable participants to integrate these processes in writing
• Ensuring sufficient ‘time on task’ consistently across the course (Gibbs).
• More explicit use of LCT: Semantics (Maton in Vorster & Quinn 2012)
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Legitimation code theory: semantics
Concepts of semantic gravity (SG) and semantic density (SD) to understand how we introduce theories and concepts
SG: degree to which meaning relates to context (concrete/abstract)
SD: degree to which meaning is condensed within symbols, so this is related to complexity
(Maton in Vorster & Quinn 2012)
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SG-
SD+
SG+
SD-
Abstract concepts/ common words used with their common meaning
Real world examples/ common words used with their common meaning
Abstract concepts/ specific brief terms or symbols
Real world examples/ specific brief terms or symbols
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Curriculum planning(teaching & assessment)
• Consciously moving between higher and lower SDand weaker and stronger SG (sematic wave)
• Ensure that students are developing deeper understanding of complex theories and concepts and are able to apply these to their contextual realities in meaningful ways
• Require participants to constantly articulate understandings verbally and in writing and ensure constant feedback
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“… unpacking and then repacking complex
concepts” (Maton)
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Changes in mode and pedagogy
‘Issue’ Ideas
Much larger classes Tutorial groups (trained tutors & mentors)
Week long contact sessions More writing and reading during contact sessions
Little/no preparation prior to the contact sessions (less reading)
Compulsory tasks in preparation for sessions (own practice as well as guided reading tasks)
Less preparation between sessions (less reading)
Compulsory scaffolded tasks for module assignmentPeer and tutor feedback
Less writing Much more writing focusing specifically on critique, reflexivity, praxis.Exemplars of writing
Less feedback More feedback from facilitators, tutors and peers