The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social Sciences
To investigate competence in the social sciences, we propose to define competence as a particular configuration of the learner’s cognition, strategic repertoire, motivation, and orientation toward knowing. Specifically, we focus on epistemic beliefs and on the changes that a view of knowing as a com...
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Bielefeld University
2010-12-01
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Series: | Journal of Social Science Education |
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doaj-8da5f2108de141ef8299dccb0a6d491e2020-11-24T21:28:32ZdeuBielefeld UniversityJournal of Social Science Education1618-52932010-12-019410.4119/jsse-538The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social SciencesLiliana MaggioniEmily FoxPatricia A. AlexanderTo investigate competence in the social sciences, we propose to define competence as a particular configuration of the learner’s cognition, strategic repertoire, motivation, and orientation toward knowing. Specifically, we focus on epistemic beliefs and on the changes that a view of knowing as a complex, effortful, generative, evidence-seeking, and reflective enterprise entails. In this context, we discuss how familiarity with the processes used to justify knowledge claims within specific disciplinary communities can provide useful tools to develop the kind of adaptive and consistent thinking that characterize competence in different domains and how this focus may aid the identification of characteristics common across domains. We use our empirical exploration of adolescents’ development of competence in the domain of history to illustrate the implications of this theoretical framework, to highlight the relations between domain-specific epistemic beliefs and kind of understanding that students built as a result of reading multiple texts, and to suggest what pedagogical practices may have influenced students’ orientations toward knowing in these three history classes.http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/538 |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
deu |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Liliana Maggioni Emily Fox Patricia A. Alexander |
spellingShingle |
Liliana Maggioni Emily Fox Patricia A. Alexander The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social Sciences Journal of Social Science Education |
author_facet |
Liliana Maggioni Emily Fox Patricia A. Alexander |
author_sort |
Liliana Maggioni |
title |
The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social Sciences |
title_short |
The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social Sciences |
title_full |
The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social Sciences |
title_fullStr |
The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social Sciences |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Epistemic Dimension of Competence in the Social Sciences |
title_sort |
epistemic dimension of competence in the social sciences |
publisher |
Bielefeld University |
series |
Journal of Social Science Education |
issn |
1618-5293 |
publishDate |
2010-12-01 |
description |
To investigate competence in the social sciences, we propose to define competence as a particular configuration of the learner’s cognition, strategic repertoire, motivation, and orientation toward knowing. Specifically, we focus on epistemic beliefs and on the changes that a view of knowing as a complex, effortful, generative, evidence-seeking, and reflective enterprise entails. In this context, we discuss how familiarity with the processes used to justify knowledge claims within specific disciplinary communities can provide useful tools to develop the kind of adaptive and consistent thinking that characterize competence in different domains and how this focus may aid the identification of characteristics common across domains. We use our empirical exploration of adolescents’ development of competence in the domain of history to illustrate the implications of this theoretical framework, to highlight the relations between domain-specific epistemic beliefs and kind of understanding that students built as a result of reading multiple texts, and to suggest what pedagogical practices may have influenced students’ orientations toward knowing in these three history classes. |
url |
http://www.jsse.org/index.php/jsse/article/view/538 |
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