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Spaces where learning takes place: rethinking contemporary approaches to learning and teaching

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 21:50 authored by Hariz HalilovichHariz Halilovich, Angela CarboneAngela Carbone, Belinda Ross
This paper discusses a variety of approaches to utilising different spaces, places and environments to make learning and teaching in higher education more effective, socially engaging, and relevant. It starts with the proposition that, in anthropological and pedagogical sense, spaces only become places through human action and imagination, the two essential human qualities critical for acquiring, applying and creating new knowledge. In addition to reflecting on different learning spaces and places, the authors discuss students' experiences with spatial (and social) contexts applied in the postgraduate unit Contemporary Learning Environments, an integral part of Monash University's Graduate Certificate in Academic Practice. Whilst the paradigms of experiential, reflexive and blended learning have been the underpinning pedagogical philosophies of this unit, an attempt has been made to closely align learning content with learning contexts by conducting the 'classes beyond the classrooms'-in public places such as museums, community centres and parks as well as in more traditional venues such as seminar rooms, lecture theatres and simulation labs. While providing an analysis of the quantitative and qualitative data from the students' evaluation and feedback, the paper goes beyond a mere audit of the unit-arguing that learning and teaching in higher education still remains deeply embodied and meaningful social events situated in real places rather than in some dislocated, depersonalised 'non-place'.

History

Related Materials

Journal

HERDSA - Research and Development in Higher Education: The Place of Learning and Teaching

Volume

36

Start page

175

End page

186

Total pages

12

Publisher

Higher Education Research and Development Society of Australasia, Inc

Place published

Australia

Language

English

Copyright

© 2013 HERDSA and the authors.

Former Identifier

2006055246

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2015-09-29

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