Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of Learning

One challenge with general education is the often-clashing goal of vocationalism,or educating for the purpose a specific careers or professions. Through a series of longitudinal interviews spanning a group of 14 students’ second and fourth semesters at a public, regional research university, the aut...

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Main Author: Dana Lynn Driscoll
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Calgary 2014-03-01
Series:Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal
Online Access:http://tlijournal.com/tli/index.php/TLI/article/view/67
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spelling doaj-5575b420660248b680dfc584907f477f2020-11-25T03:24:37ZengUniversity of CalgaryTeaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal2167-47792167-47872014-03-0121213710.20343/teachlearninqu.2.1.2148Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of LearningDana Lynn DriscollOne challenge with general education is the often-clashing goal of vocationalism,or educating for the purpose a specific careers or professions. Through a series of longitudinal interviews spanning a group of 14 students’ second and fourth semesters at a public, regional research university, the author examines the intersection of beliefs and values about general education, transfer of learning, and vocationalism, and how these beliefs and values change over time. Findings reveal that for many students, vocationalism creates a single-minded focus on students’ career preparation and major coursework and invites disregard for the value of general education courses that do not appear to immediately relate to students’ future careers. This devaluing is particularly clear in students’ first year; as students enter their sophomore years, they grow to value learning in general. The article concludes with suggestions for university-level and course-specific curricular change to better address vocationalism, value, and the need to transfer learning within general education courses.http://tlijournal.com/tli/index.php/TLI/article/view/67
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Dana Lynn Driscoll
spellingShingle Dana Lynn Driscoll
Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of Learning
Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal
author_facet Dana Lynn Driscoll
author_sort Dana Lynn Driscoll
title Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of Learning
title_short Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of Learning
title_full Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of Learning
title_fullStr Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of Learning
title_full_unstemmed Clashing Values: A Longitudinal, Exploratory Study of Student Beliefs about General Education, Vocationalism, and Transfer of Learning
title_sort clashing values: a longitudinal, exploratory study of student beliefs about general education, vocationalism, and transfer of learning
publisher University of Calgary
series Teaching & Learning Inquiry: The ISSOTL Journal
issn 2167-4779
2167-4787
publishDate 2014-03-01
description One challenge with general education is the often-clashing goal of vocationalism,or educating for the purpose a specific careers or professions. Through a series of longitudinal interviews spanning a group of 14 students’ second and fourth semesters at a public, regional research university, the author examines the intersection of beliefs and values about general education, transfer of learning, and vocationalism, and how these beliefs and values change over time. Findings reveal that for many students, vocationalism creates a single-minded focus on students’ career preparation and major coursework and invites disregard for the value of general education courses that do not appear to immediately relate to students’ future careers. This devaluing is particularly clear in students’ first year; as students enter their sophomore years, they grow to value learning in general. The article concludes with suggestions for university-level and course-specific curricular change to better address vocationalism, value, and the need to transfer learning within general education courses.
url http://tlijournal.com/tli/index.php/TLI/article/view/67
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