How Differences of Opinion Influence Students’ Capacity to Think Geographically


Autoria(s): Buchanek, Rose
Data(s)

01/01/2011

Resumo

Currently, the Australian Government is working towards the development and implementation of a national geography curriculum for Australian Schools. A common response to the question of what geography education is based upon is ‘maps’ (Sorenson, 2009). Geography teachers, curriculum designers and educational researchers alike face the battle of broadening the perception of geography education beyond this view (Sorenson, 2009; Maude, 2009; McInerney, Berg, Hutchinson, Maude & Sorenson, 2009). The Shape of the National Curriculum for Geography (Australian Curriculum and Reporting Authority 2011, p8) states that the new curriculum will “develop students’ broader ability to think critically about contemporary events”. This new direction demonstrates a focus in on students’ capacity to ‘think geographically’ (Jackson 2006). This study engages with this new curriculum direction and explores the influence of an approach to group learning pedagogy based around students’ differences of opinion on students’ capacity to think geographically. A sample of 43 Year 9 Geography students participated in a two week learning sequence investigating the impacts of large scale earthquakes.<br />This paper communicates the findings from a comparative case study analysis of two student group conversations of different group types. According to the results of this study, organising students into groups around their differences of opinion encourages students to engage in and sustain higher levels of geographical thinking.

Identificador

http://hdl.handle.net/10536/DRO/DU:30041572

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Common Ground Publishing

Relação

http://dro.deakin.edu.au/eserv/DU:30041572/buchanek-differencesofopinion-2011.pdf

Direitos

2011, Common Ground, Rose Buchanek, All Rights Reserved

Palavras-Chave #Geography Education #Group Learning #Student Conversation #Thinking Skills
Tipo

Journal Article