Publication | Closed Access
Staking a Claim on Learning: What We Should Know about Learning in Higher Education and Why
67
Citations
24
References
2013
Year
Inquiry-based LearningCartesian DoubtScience TeachingEducationLearning-by-doingClassroom DiscourseTeacher EducationLearning By TeachingPhilosophy Of EducationLanguage StudiesPrior KnowledgePedagogyLearning SciencesCollege TeachingLearning AnalyticsHigher EducationTeachingEducational PhilosophyEpistemologyLearning OutcomeFoundations Of EducationEducational Theory
Researchers can deepen investigations of college teaching and learning by attention on how students construe a lesson’s subject matter and on how teachers make sense of and respond to their students’ subject-matter thinking in the moment. While it is possible to examine teaching and learning minus subject-matter depth, doing so obscures the dynamics that define education. My illustrative example captures teaching and learning about the idea of Cartesian doubt in an introductory philosophy class. I analyze students’ struggles with this new (and to most, startling) idea in light of their prior knowledge. I also examine the instructor’s efforts to grasp and respond to students’ evolving conceptions of Cartesian doubt.
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