Methodological developments in phenomenography : investing using information to learn in the discipline classroom


Autoria(s): Maybee, Clarence; Bruce, Christine S.; Lupton, Mandy
Contribuinte(s)

Kurbanoğlu, Serap

Grassian, Esther

Mizrachi, Diane

Catts, Ralph

Akça, Sümeyye

Špirane, Sonja

Data(s)

2013

Resumo

This paper discusses methodological developments in phenomenography that make it apropos for the study of teaching and learning to use information in educational environments. Phenomenography is typically used to analyze interview data to determine different ways of experiencing a phenomenon. There is an established tradition of phenomenographic research in the study of information literacy (ex: Bruce, 1997; 2008; Lupton, 2008; Webber, Boon, & Johnston, 2005). Drawing from the large body of evidence complied in two decades of research, phenomenographers developed variation theory, which explains what a learner can feasibly learn from a classroom lesson based on how the phenomenon being studied is presented (Marton, Runesson, & Tsui, 2004). Variation theory’s ability to establish the critical conditions necessary for learning to occur has resulted in the use of phenomenographic methods to study classroom interactions by collecting and analyzing naturalistic data through observation, as well as interviews concerning teachers’ intentions and students’ different experiences of classroom lessons. Describing the methodological developments of phenomenography in relation to understanding the classroom experience, this paper discusses the potential benefits and challenges of utilizing such methods to research the experiences of teaching and learning to use information in discipline-focused classrooms. The application of phenomenographic methodology for this purpose is exemplified with an ongoing study that explores how students learned to use information in an undergraduate language and gender course (Maybee, Bruce, Lupton, & Rebmann, in press). This paper suggests that by providing a nuanced understanding of what is intended for students to learn about using information, and relating that to what transpires in the classroom and how students experience these lessons, phenomenography and variation theory offer a viable framework for further understanding and improving how students are taught, and learn to use information.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/64626/

Publicador

Hacettepe University Department of Information Management

Relação

Maybee, Clarence, Bruce, Christine S., & Lupton, Mandy (2013) Methodological developments in phenomenography : investing using information to learn in the discipline classroom. In Kurbanoğlu, Serap, Grassian, Esther, Mizrachi, Diane, Catts, Ralph, Akça, Sümeyye, & Špirane, Sonja (Eds.) Proceedings of the European Conference on Information Literacy (ECIL 2013), Hacettepe University Department of Information Management, Istanbul, Turkey.

Direitos

Copyright 2013 Hacettepe University Department of Information Management and authors

Fonte

Faculty of Education; School of Information Systems; Science & Engineering Faculty

Palavras-Chave #080600 INFORMATION SYSTEMS #Phenomenography #Variation theory #Information literacy #Information use #Classroom lessons
Tipo

Conference Paper