Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and Teaching
This study evaluated a model of student-engaged educational development. Despite widespread commitment to student engagement across many institutional activities, student participation as partners with faculty in teaching and learning enhancement has been identified as a threshold concept for educat...
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University of Calgary
2016-09-01
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doaj-217b7baf61eb40f3b520b36a13e136242020-11-25T02:22:08ZengUniversity of CalgaryTeaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal2167-47792167-47872016-09-014211410.20343/teachlearninqu.4.2.695Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and TeachingCamille Kandiko Howson0Saranne Weller1King's College, LondonLondon South Bank UniversityThis study evaluated a model of student-engaged educational development. Despite widespread commitment to student engagement across many institutional activities, student participation as partners with faculty in teaching and learning enhancement has been identified as a threshold concept for educational development. This study sought not only to establish a student-engaged model of teaching observation in a United Kingdom context, but also to critically examine the ways in which student, faculty, and developer participants conceptualise student expertise in relation to learning and teaching. Concept-map mediated interviews with students and faculty in humanities and healthcare subjects elicited conceptions and comparative knowledge structures of pedagogical intelligence for the purposes of enhancing teaching practice. The outcomes of the study are considered in relation to the theorisation of student engagement with particular focus on perspectives of expertise and power relations.http://tlijournal.com/tli/index.php/TLI/article/view/109Educational DevelopmentExpertiseStudent-faculty PartnershipTeaching ObservationPower Relations |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Camille Kandiko Howson Saranne Weller |
spellingShingle |
Camille Kandiko Howson Saranne Weller Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and Teaching Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal Educational Development Expertise Student-faculty Partnership Teaching Observation Power Relations |
author_facet |
Camille Kandiko Howson Saranne Weller |
author_sort |
Camille Kandiko Howson |
title |
Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and Teaching |
title_short |
Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and Teaching |
title_full |
Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and Teaching |
title_fullStr |
Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and Teaching |
title_full_unstemmed |
Defining Pedagogic Expertise: Students and New Lecturers as Co-Developers in Learning and Teaching |
title_sort |
defining pedagogic expertise: students and new lecturers as co-developers in learning and teaching |
publisher |
University of Calgary |
series |
Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal |
issn |
2167-4779 2167-4787 |
publishDate |
2016-09-01 |
description |
This study evaluated a model of student-engaged educational development. Despite widespread commitment to student engagement across many institutional activities, student participation as partners with faculty in teaching and learning enhancement has been identified as a threshold concept for educational development. This study sought not only to establish a student-engaged model of teaching observation in a United Kingdom context, but also to critically examine the ways in which student, faculty, and developer participants conceptualise student expertise in relation to learning and teaching. Concept-map mediated interviews with students and faculty in humanities and healthcare subjects elicited conceptions and comparative knowledge structures of pedagogical intelligence for the purposes of enhancing teaching practice. The outcomes of the study are considered in relation to the theorisation of student engagement with particular focus on perspectives of expertise and power relations. |
topic |
Educational Development Expertise Student-faculty Partnership Teaching Observation Power Relations |
url |
http://tlijournal.com/tli/index.php/TLI/article/view/109 |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT camillekandikohowson definingpedagogicexpertisestudentsandnewlecturersascodevelopersinlearningandteaching AT saranneweller definingpedagogicexpertisestudentsandnewlecturersascodevelopersinlearningandteaching |
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1724863140718444544 |