Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate Physics

How can research on academic literacies throw light on the challenge to widen access to undergraduate science studies? This article explores what an academic literacies approach might mean in the context of undergraduate physics. The study examines the pedagogical practices and student learning in t...

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Main Authors: Honjiswa Conana, Delia Marshall, Jennifer Case
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of the Western Cape 2016-12-01
Series:Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
Subjects:
Online Access:http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/73
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spelling doaj-efafeab03ab74839b63ebc6adc0d71222020-11-25T00:03:37ZengUniversity of the Western CapeCritical Studies in Teaching and Learning2310-71032016-12-0142284473Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate PhysicsHonjiswa Conana0Delia Marshall1Jennifer Case2University of the Western CapeUniversity of the Western CapeUniversity of Cape TownHow can research on academic literacies throw light on the challenge to widen access to undergraduate science studies? This article explores what an academic literacies approach might mean in the context of undergraduate physics. The study examines the pedagogical practices and student learning in two undergraduate Physics courses, a mainstream and an extended course, with a particular focus on the disciplinary practice of problem-solving. Concepts from the sociology of knowledge, specifically Legitimation Code Theory, offer a useful analytical framework for characterising the movement between abstract principles and concrete contexts in problem-solving and understanding how meaning is encapsulated in the dense representations of physics. The study shows that with more time and careful pedagogical attention, the extended course was able to make more explicit the literacy practices and epistemological functioning of the discipline. The study found that the extended course adopted a more explicitly normative approach to academic literacy, i.e., inducting students into the disciplinary knowledge and norms of the discipline, but elements of a transformative approach were also evident, i.e., opening up opportunities for these norms to be critiqued and contested.http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/73academic literacies, physics, problem-solving, disciplinary discourse, Legitimation Code Theory, semantic waves
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Honjiswa Conana
Delia Marshall
Jennifer Case
spellingShingle Honjiswa Conana
Delia Marshall
Jennifer Case
Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate Physics
Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
academic literacies, physics, problem-solving, disciplinary discourse, Legitimation Code Theory, semantic waves
author_facet Honjiswa Conana
Delia Marshall
Jennifer Case
author_sort Honjiswa Conana
title Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate Physics
title_short Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate Physics
title_full Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate Physics
title_fullStr Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate Physics
title_full_unstemmed Exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate Physics
title_sort exploring pedagogical possibilities for transformative approaches to academic literacies in undergraduate physics
publisher University of the Western Cape
series Critical Studies in Teaching and Learning
issn 2310-7103
publishDate 2016-12-01
description How can research on academic literacies throw light on the challenge to widen access to undergraduate science studies? This article explores what an academic literacies approach might mean in the context of undergraduate physics. The study examines the pedagogical practices and student learning in two undergraduate Physics courses, a mainstream and an extended course, with a particular focus on the disciplinary practice of problem-solving. Concepts from the sociology of knowledge, specifically Legitimation Code Theory, offer a useful analytical framework for characterising the movement between abstract principles and concrete contexts in problem-solving and understanding how meaning is encapsulated in the dense representations of physics. The study shows that with more time and careful pedagogical attention, the extended course was able to make more explicit the literacy practices and epistemological functioning of the discipline. The study found that the extended course adopted a more explicitly normative approach to academic literacy, i.e., inducting students into the disciplinary knowledge and norms of the discipline, but elements of a transformative approach were also evident, i.e., opening up opportunities for these norms to be critiqued and contested.
topic academic literacies, physics, problem-solving, disciplinary discourse, Legitimation Code Theory, semantic waves
url http://cristal.epubs.ac.za/index.php/cristal/article/view/73
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