An intentional class design model to engage first year students with threshold concepts using the academic discourse theories of Vygotsky and Laurillard


Autoria(s): McCulloch, Rosalind; Field, Rachael
Contribuinte(s)

Creagh, Tracey

Data(s)

06/07/2014

Resumo

In the context of the first-year university classroom, this paper develops Vygotsky’s claim that ‘the relations between the higher mental functions were at one time real relations between people’. By taking the main horizontal and hierarchical levels of classroom discourse and dialogue (student-student, student-teacher, teacher-teacher) and marrying these with the possibilities opened up by Laurillard’s conversational framework, we argue that the learning challenge of a ‘troublesome’ threshold concept might be met by a carefully designed sequence of teaching events and experiences for first year students, and we provide a number of strategies that exploit each level of these ‘hierarchies of discourse’. We suggest that an analytical approach to classroom design that embodies these levels of discourse in sequenced dialogic methods could be used by teachers as a strategy to interrogate and adjust teaching-in-practice especially in the first year of university study.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/75411/

Publicador

IFYHE Conference

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/75411/2/75411.pdf

http://fyhe.com.au/past_papers/papers14/10B.pdf

McCulloch, Rosalind & Field, Rachael (2014) An intentional class design model to engage first year students with threshold concepts using the academic discourse theories of Vygotsky and Laurillard. In Creagh, Tracey (Ed.) 17 International First year in Higher Education Conference Proceedings, IFYHE Conference, Darwin, Australia.

Direitos

Copyright 2014 The Authors

Fonte

QUT Business School; Chancellery; Faculty of Law; School of Law

Palavras-Chave #130200 CURRICULUM AND PEDAGOGY #effective learning and teaching #curriculum design #Conversational framework #Threshold concepts #HERN
Tipo

Conference Paper