Abstract
Introduction
Learning in the lab is distinctively complex, but a closer look into lived experiences of students and teachers provides us with sound arguments for developing the scholarship of teaching and learning in higher education. We investigated how learning in the lab is perceived through empirical studies, by addressing the research questions:
•How do students and teachers perceive high-quality learning in the laboratory?
•How can we use this understanding to develop practice?
Methods and theories
Several theoretical frameworks were adopted to frame our investigations, including Illeris’s multidimensional learning, Latour’s anthropology of science, and Kennedy’s professional learning. These translate into methodological approaches that centre on qualitative research, employing thematic and discourse analyses.
Results
Students perceive high-quality learning in the lab through various phenomenological lenses, viz. pedagogically competent teachers, close and informal contact, dialogic and reflective feedback practice, various ways of connecting the experiment to underlying theory, and seeing the transformation of data from experimental results to text1,2. From teachers’ perspective, the many dimensions of learning in the lab3 can be characterised in terms of progression and competence development4. More knowledge is being generated about how learning unfolds in real-time settings and how it can be assessed in a way that does justice to their complex yet holistic potentials5.
Implications
Our studies highlight the importance of developing pedagogical competence of lab instructors in implementing good feedback practice and addressing the unfamiliar pedagogical constructs related to lab learning.
Educational relevance
In a broader context of higher education, the whole project is relevant for realising the importance of investing on faculty’s professional development. This is not only to educate them with evidence-based practice but also foster improvement in existing practice, through close, sustainable collaboration between educational researchers and practitioners.
Learning in the lab is distinctively complex, but a closer look into lived experiences of students and teachers provides us with sound arguments for developing the scholarship of teaching and learning in higher education. We investigated how learning in the lab is perceived through empirical studies, by addressing the research questions:
•How do students and teachers perceive high-quality learning in the laboratory?
•How can we use this understanding to develop practice?
Methods and theories
Several theoretical frameworks were adopted to frame our investigations, including Illeris’s multidimensional learning, Latour’s anthropology of science, and Kennedy’s professional learning. These translate into methodological approaches that centre on qualitative research, employing thematic and discourse analyses.
Results
Students perceive high-quality learning in the lab through various phenomenological lenses, viz. pedagogically competent teachers, close and informal contact, dialogic and reflective feedback practice, various ways of connecting the experiment to underlying theory, and seeing the transformation of data from experimental results to text1,2. From teachers’ perspective, the many dimensions of learning in the lab3 can be characterised in terms of progression and competence development4. More knowledge is being generated about how learning unfolds in real-time settings and how it can be assessed in a way that does justice to their complex yet holistic potentials5.
Implications
Our studies highlight the importance of developing pedagogical competence of lab instructors in implementing good feedback practice and addressing the unfamiliar pedagogical constructs related to lab learning.
Educational relevance
In a broader context of higher education, the whole project is relevant for realising the importance of investing on faculty’s professional development. This is not only to educate them with evidence-based practice but also foster improvement in existing practice, through close, sustainable collaboration between educational researchers and practitioners.
Original language | English |
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Publication date | 2023 |
Number of pages | 1 |
Publication status | Published - 2023 |
Event | DUN Conference 2023: Learning Environments: Relations & Settings - Kolding, Denmark Duration: 24 May 2023 → 25 May 2023 https://www.tilmeld.dk/dunk23 |
Conference
Conference | DUN Conference 2023 |
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Country/Territory | Denmark |
City | Kolding |
Period | 24/05/2023 → 25/05/2023 |
Internet address |