emergent learning
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2021 ◽  
Vol ahead-of-print (ahead-of-print) ◽  
Author(s):  
Belinda Gottschalk ◽  
Nick Hopwood

Purpose Clinical supervision is a crucial workplace practice for professional learning and development. Research is needed to investigate in detail what happens in supervision to understand how this practice contributes to learning. This paper aims to examine how professionals work with knowledge and navigate epistemic challenges in working with problems of practice. Design/methodology/approach Three pairs of psychologists audio-recorded five consecutive supervision sessions and were interviewed twice during that time. Analysis considered supervision as a site of emergent learning, focusing on what was discussed and how problems were worked on, whether as epistemic objects (open-ended, aimed at generating new insights) or by using an approach to knowledge objects that focused more directly on what to do next. Findings One pair consistently adopted an epistemic object approach, while another was consistently more action-oriented, focused on knowledge objects. The third pair used both approaches, sometimes expanding the object with a view to gaining insight and understanding, while at other times focusing on next steps and future action. Originality/value To the best of the authors’ knowledge, this study is the first to study clinical supervision in terms of how knowledge work is done. Foregrounding the epistemic dimensions of supervision, it reveals previously unexplored but consequential differences in how knowledge is worked with and produced as supervisory pairs discuss complex issues of practice.


2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Sarah Honeychurch ◽  
Wendy Taleo

In this report on a specialised topic of remix and emergent learning we will demonstrate an open education project that emerged from the future. Using open and inclusive practices, a global group of educators engaged in some serious fun to collaborate and share digital and physical artefacts based on a poem. The poem itself was collaboratively created using open, online software, and allowed for serendipitous participation without the need to learn new skills. The set of work that was and is being created is beautiful, diverse, and far reaching. We discuss the practices of remix that this collaboration uses and show how these seemingly trivial experiences both nurture wellbeing, lead to serious learning, and have wide applicability in other, more formal, learning contexts.


Author(s):  
Carol Farbotko ◽  
Phillipa Watson ◽  
Taukiei Kitara ◽  
Elaine Stratford
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
pp. 105186
Author(s):  
José Luis Díaz-Agea ◽  
Marina Manresa Parres ◽  
María José Pujalte-Jesús ◽  
María Belén Soto Castellón ◽  
Mario Aroca Lucas ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (18) ◽  
pp. 10172
Author(s):  
Taryn Mead ◽  
Carlie Pietsch ◽  
Victoria Matthew ◽  
Surbhi Lipkin-Moore ◽  
Ellen Metzger ◽  
...  

Amidst the COVID-19 upheaval to higher education, a grantor-led community of practice (CoP) supported faculty members to deliver an innovative, sustainability-oriented entrepreneurship curriculum and maintain resiliency as teaching professionals. This paper discusses how through engagement in the CoP, this group of faculty from across engineering, material science, business, and geosciences demonstrated resilience, adaptability, and pivoted to create curriculum for students in real time, as the events of the COVID-19 pandemic unfolded throughout 2020 and impacted face-to-face learning. The role the community of practice played in sustaining and supporting the faculty will be discussed. Case studies from faculty members will demonstrate how sustainable design and social responsibility can be integrated into entrepreneurially focused classes and student experiences across disciplines. The primary contribution of this research is the important role that an emergent learning framework can play in informing how best to optimize the CoP format and approach in a way that leverages and addresses individual member strengths, challenges, and experiences, and supports the needs of CoP members during a time of significant change and crisis.


Author(s):  
A. Kh. Marinosyan ◽  
O. V. Andryushkova

In the article, using the case of Learning Management System (LMS), we consider a methodology for assessing the quality of education, taking into account the requests of experts, lecturers, and students. There is a growing relevance of such research due to the digitalization of education, the transition to distance learning as the main or auxiliary form of organizing the educational process. The applied methodology relies on the earlier developed concept of emergent learning and the system for the assessment of the quality of education, using the conception of negentropy. By adapting this methodology to the LMS assessment task, we show the importance of creating a hierarchical scheme of modules and functional elements necessary for an effective organization of the learning process. In order to provide an integral assessment, it is necessary, according to our position, to determine the weighting factor of each module and of each criterion by which this module is assessed and then to determine the values of each criterion for a specific LMS. A proposed flexible assessment system that takes into account the requests of all aspects of the educational process, allows, by modifying the weighting factors, to adapt the equation in accordance with the specificity of the subject area and educational institution within which the LMS is used. As an advantage of this methodology, it makes it possible not only to compare different LMSs in terms of quality but also to identify areas in which it is possible to improve and refine existing LMSs. We analyze the risks associated with the transformation of assessment systems from an auxiliary tool into an end in itself. In this regard, we propose an algorithm for separating qualitative and quantitative factors accounting, which helps to avoid the negative effect of the absolutization of assessment systems. In the conclusion, we outline the ways of developing the design of such a system of the management of educational process in which quality requirements prevail over circumstantial ones.


Author(s):  
Karen Hutchins Bieluch ◽  
Alexandra Sclafani ◽  
Douglas T. Bolger ◽  
Michael Cox

2021 ◽  
Vol 14 (1) ◽  
pp. 163
Author(s):  
Charles Bazerman
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 10 (3) ◽  
pp. 272
Author(s):  
Magdeline M. Temban ◽  
Tan Kim Hua ◽  
Nur Ehsan Mohd Said

Education has been greatly affected by the COVID-19 pandemic. Children are becoming restless and stressed upon adjusting to emergent learning. An online platform that can regulate informal learning opportunities and entertainment for children during the worldwide crisis is needed. This need points towards the potential use of YouTube Kids (YTK); the app is age-appropriate and it offers popular videos with diverse contents. Studies have focused on the safety of YTK, but none has explored how young users could navigate their informal learning through the app. Fifty respondents aged 11 to 12 from a rural school in Sarawak, Malaysia participated in this study. Employing a mixed-methods research design, the study incorporated an online questionnaire and semi-structured group interviews as research instruments. Findings indicated distinctive features concerning the safety and multimodality of YTK. These features make YTK a great informal learning tool for children during present worldwide pandemic.   Received: 25 January 2021 / Accepted: 24 March 2021 / Published: 10 May 2021


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