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Threshold Concepts & Troublesome Knowledge

Threshold Concepts & Troublesome Knowledge. Ray Land University of Strathclyde Glasgow UK Jan H.F. Meyer University of Durham UK. ISSOTL 10, 22 October 2010. An eclectic approach. ‘....Land and Meyer may be seen as promiscuous mongrels who care not with whom they sleep...’ (Cousin 2006).

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Threshold Concepts & Troublesome Knowledge

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  1. Threshold Concepts & Troublesome Knowledge Ray Land University of Strathclyde Glasgow UK Jan H.F. Meyer University of Durham UK ISSOTL 10, 22 October 2010

  2. An eclectic approach ‘....Land and Meyer may be seen as promiscuous mongrels who care not with whom they sleep...’ (Cousin 2006)

  3. pax intrantibus, salus exeuntibus (1609)

  4. Real learning requires stepping into the unknown, which initiates a rupture in knowing... By definition, all TC scholarship is concerned (directly or indirectly) with encountering the unknown. Schwartzman 2010 p.38

  5. I am part of all that I have met; Yet all experience is an arch wherethro’Gleams that untravell’d world, whose margin fadesFor ever and for ever when I move. Tennyson ‘Ulysses’

  6. Overview • A brief introduction to thresholds • Extending the boundaries: recent scholarship • The expanding framework • Projects • Thresholds as a form of pedagogical research (Cousin 2008) • Thresholds as a tool of cultural analysis • The ‘Singing Revolution’: Crisis in post-Communist Estonian national identity (Kutsar & Kärner 2010) • Interdisciplinarity (Land 2010)

  7. 1) An introduction

  8. There are… ‘Conceptual gateways’ ‘portals’

  9. …that lead toa new way of understanding, interpreting or viewing something, a transformed internal view of subject matter, subject landscape, or even world view… without which the learner cannot progress

  10. PLACES

  11. 2) Extending the boundaries: Recent scholarship

  12. Threshold concepts provide us with a new analytical lens to focus on critical, and perhaps previously neglected, aspects of variation in student learning

  13. …a lens through which to reconceptualise student progression and ‘stuck places’

  14. Deconstruction Object oriented programming Equal temperament Limit Elasticity Uncertainty Reactive power Scale Otherness Modularity Hypothesis Sa/V ratio Caring Pointers Precedent Proof Laplace transform Compactness Signification

  15. The expanding framework 3) The expanding framework 78 disciplinary/subject categories 11 theses and dissertations 78 discipilinary/subject categories Links to video, ppt presentations and other TCF websites Mick Flanagan http://www.ee.ucl.ac.uk/~mflanaga/thresholds.html

  16. 4) Projects Engineering thresholds: An approach to curriculum renewal (UWA, Caroline Baillie, 2010, A$ 200,000)

  17. 5) Thresholds as a form of pedagogical research (Cousin 2008)

  18. Transactional Curriculum Inquiry Glynis Cousin 2008 ...the search for threshold concepts has the potential to open up discussions among subject specialists, students and educational researchers, creating forms of transactional curriculum inquiry between these three parties.

  19. ...threshold concept research does not require the academic to learn another discipline; on the contrary, it requires that she goes more deeply into her own for the purposes of formulating the best ways of teaching and learning it.

  20. By staging the exploration at the site of the subject and of its difficulties, threshold concept research promises to harness an academic’s research curiosity for his subject with a new curiosity about how best to teach it; this promise carries with it an enhanced capacity for research and teaching to be dynamically linked.

  21. 6) Thresholds as a tool of cultural analysis

  22. The ‘Singing Revolution’: Crisis in post-Communist Estonian national identity Dagmar Kutsar & Anita Kärner (2010)

  23. This is an attempt to look at society as a learning and teaching environment during an extremely intensive period of societal changes, when one socio-economic and political system collapses and is exchanged for another. The transitions are meaningful events, accompanied by uncertainties, learning the new, and changing identities and structures. (p.384)

  24. During the transitional period, society is overwhelmed by a liminal space – no longer what it was and not yet what it will be. The liminal space is shared by the actors of transition, the institutions, groups and individuals all filled with a mixture of new and old cognitions, emotions, myths and behavioural patterns. (p.384)

  25. The Baltic Chain 23 August 1989 Tallin -> Riga -> Vilnius, 600 kms

  26. Togetherness was not always accompanied by positive emotions. In the situation of rapid societal change, individuals are often unable to adapt as rapidly as changes occur. For that reason, rapid change, even positive in essence, brings emotional tensions and fears of loss of cognitive control over the situation, which results in feelings of powerlessness, dissatisfaction and alienation. (p.386)

  27. Well-being acknowledges the possibilities as well as limitations for action. In general, the process of societal transitions in Estonia was tense for everybody involved in the manner of decreasing their perceived quality of life. (p.386)

  28. The Communitas, using Turner’s (1969) approach, expressed the readiness for creation of the ‘anti’-structure in Estonian society. Springing forth from the ruins of the collapsing totalitarian system and fed by opposition towards it, the Communitas was destructive towards the old system and its power structures.

  29. Dramatis personae - ‘the actors of transition’ The ‘Communitas’ The ‘Others’ The (Soviet) nomenklatura The ‘Teachers’

  30. ii Interdisciplinarity Ray Land (2010)

  31. Threshold concepts and disciplinarity TCs & CoP research has argued that disciplinarity is a key determinant of academic identity Probably most TC research to date concerned with disciplinary formation, and acquisition of robust ‘WTP’ (Entwistle & McCune 2009)

  32. Disciplinary identity Disciplines have developed their own conceptual worlds , their own WTPs and their own learning thresholds TCs part of the mapping & patrolling of disciplinary boundaries. Disciplines serve as bases of personal identity (Mary Henkel 2000).

  33. Disciplinary subjectivity determined by these boundaries, as with urban and national identities, eg a Glaswegian, an Australian

  34. Disciplinary practice ‘The chains of habit are generally too small to be felt until they are too strong to be broken’. Dr Samuel Johnson 1709 - 1784

  35. The tidiness and enclosure of disciplines ‘Whereas disciplines can attain a high degree of enclosure around self-defined concepts , methods and questions, and leave aside matters not convenient for ..[a].. disciplinary matrix, a practically oriented public servant enterprise like public administration should never adopt such a prioritisation of tidiness above usefulness.’ Gasper 2010 p.53

  36. ‘It has to draw on various types of understanding in order to tackle various types of pressing and interconnected real issues; it links material from different fields without unifying them.’ Gasper 2010 p.53

  37. A ‘problematique of interdisciplinarity’ ‘The complexity of policy cases frequently exceeds the grasp of discipline-based knowledge , even when brought together from different disciplines’ Gasper 2010 p.53

  38. Disciplinarity and temporality ‘Much interdisciplinarity arises in response to practical and immediate life problem situations, where we cannot wait for discipline-gained knowledge that is not yet available. Such work, oriented to life problems, might not be conventionally scientifically elegant, but it draws on sophisticated craft skills of selection, synthesis and judgement.’

  39. Characteristics of the 21st century • Uncertainty • Speed and acceleration • Complexity • Multiculturalism • Mobility of the population • Conflict (social, military) • Inter-generational tension • Need for ethical citizenship • Information saturation • Proliferation of knowledge • Globalisation • Internationalisation • Private /public sector tension • Increasing panic • Unpredictability • Risk • Need for flexibility and agility • Entitlement v responsibility • Scarcity of resources • Austerity • Sustainability • Need for prudence • Transparency & accountability • Discontinuity and rupture • Shifting paradigms • Poverty v affluence • Outsourcing of jobs • Youthfulness

  40. SupercomplexityRiskSpeedUncertaintyContestability‘A radically unknowable world’ Barnett 2004: 247-260

  41. Forensics (criminal investigation) Chemists, medics, police (SoCOs), lawyers, journalists, politicians, media, civil administrators, criminologists, counsellors, psychologists. Public Energy Utilities(tidal barrier technologies) Electrical Engineers, civil engineers, ecologists, biologists, zoologists, financiers, economists, computer modellers, politicians, media, lawyers, urban planners, rural & community development, tourism, journalists, policy analysts, management scientists, sociologists Climate Change (global warming) Environmental scientists, physicists, meteorologists, geologists, geographers, economists, statisticians, computer scientists, politicians, journalists, civil servants, policy analysts, sociologists

  42. Post normal science Philosophers and practitioners of science have identified this particular mode of scientific activity as one that occurs where the stakes are high, uncertainties large and decisions urgent, and where values are embedded in the way science is done and spoken. It has been labelled ‘post-normal’ science…The danger of a ‘normal’ reading of science is that it assumes science can first find truth, then speak truth to power, and that truth-based policy will then follow. Climate change is too important to be left to scientists - least of all the normal ones. Hulme 2007

  43. monodisciplinarity

  44. monocularism:the gaze of the Cyclops

  45. The recognition and understanding of this is a Threshold Concept.

  46. Interdisciplinarity or Transdisciplinarity presents another encounter with Troublesome Knowledge.

  47. It requires a significant ontological shift

  48. It constitutes a form of transformational learning ‘Transformative learning involves experiencing a deep, structural shift in the basic premises of thought, feelings, and actions. It is a shift of consciousness that dramatically and irreversibly alters our way of being in the world.’ O’Sullivan et al, 2002, p. 11

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