Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis

The recent financial crisis has motivated economic educators to rethink what economics should be taught, acknowledging disconnects between classroom content and real world events. We introduce a learning theory approach that is broader, one that goes beyond such context specific discussions of found...

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Main Authors: KimMarie McGoldrick, Janice Peterson
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bielefeld University 2011-10-01
Series:Journal of Social Science Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.jsse.org/2011/2011-3/pdf/mcgoldrick-peterson-jsse-3-2011.pdf
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spelling doaj-037ab1201b3f46989f03f8dcadabfa3d2020-11-25T01:05:18ZdeuBielefeld UniversityJournal of Social Science Education1611-96651618-52932011-10-011031625Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial CrisisKimMarie McGoldrickJanice PetersonThe recent financial crisis has motivated economic educators to rethink what economics should be taught, acknowledging disconnects between classroom content and real world events. We introduce a learning theory approach that is broader, one that goes beyond such context specific discussions of foundational knowledge and application (i.e., teaching about this specific crisis) and provide a framework to address the broader issue of how teaching practices can, by their very nature, minimize such disconnects and provide more effective processes for teaching about current economic conditions. The theory of significant learning (Fink 2003) is presented as a model of how experiences can be used to develop a deep approach to learning, learning that lasts. Experiential learning pedagogies are timeless in that they can be readily modified to promote deeper understanding over a wide range of economic environments. Focusing on one category of significant learning, the human dimension, and one component of the financial crisis, unemployment, examples which modify existing experiential learning practices are described to demonstrate how such pedagogic practices can be readily adapted to teaching and learning about current economic conditions. In short, we demonstrate that incorporating student experiences into pedagogic practice provides a natural alignment of teaching content and real world events, regardless of how those change over time.http://www.jsse.org/2011/2011-3/pdf/mcgoldrick-peterson-jsse-3-2011.pdfPedagogyservice-learningexperiential educationfinancial crisisunemployment
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author KimMarie McGoldrick
Janice Peterson
spellingShingle KimMarie McGoldrick
Janice Peterson
Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis
Journal of Social Science Education
Pedagogy
service-learning
experiential education
financial crisis
unemployment
author_facet KimMarie McGoldrick
Janice Peterson
author_sort KimMarie McGoldrick
title Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis
title_short Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis
title_full Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis
title_fullStr Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis
title_full_unstemmed Significant Learning and Civic Education: Shifting Frameworks for Teaching in Light of Learning about the Financial Crisis
title_sort significant learning and civic education: shifting frameworks for teaching in light of learning about the financial crisis
publisher Bielefeld University
series Journal of Social Science Education
issn 1611-9665
1618-5293
publishDate 2011-10-01
description The recent financial crisis has motivated economic educators to rethink what economics should be taught, acknowledging disconnects between classroom content and real world events. We introduce a learning theory approach that is broader, one that goes beyond such context specific discussions of foundational knowledge and application (i.e., teaching about this specific crisis) and provide a framework to address the broader issue of how teaching practices can, by their very nature, minimize such disconnects and provide more effective processes for teaching about current economic conditions. The theory of significant learning (Fink 2003) is presented as a model of how experiences can be used to develop a deep approach to learning, learning that lasts. Experiential learning pedagogies are timeless in that they can be readily modified to promote deeper understanding over a wide range of economic environments. Focusing on one category of significant learning, the human dimension, and one component of the financial crisis, unemployment, examples which modify existing experiential learning practices are described to demonstrate how such pedagogic practices can be readily adapted to teaching and learning about current economic conditions. In short, we demonstrate that incorporating student experiences into pedagogic practice provides a natural alignment of teaching content and real world events, regardless of how those change over time.
topic Pedagogy
service-learning
experiential education
financial crisis
unemployment
url http://www.jsse.org/2011/2011-3/pdf/mcgoldrick-peterson-jsse-3-2011.pdf
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