- Journal of Pedagogic Development
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- Instructions to authors
- Volume 8 Issue 3 November 2018
- Volume 8 Issue 2 July 2018
- Volume 8, Issue 1 March 2018
- Volume 7, Issue 3 November 2017
- Volume 7, Issue 2 July 2017
- Volume 7, Issue 1 March 2017
- Volume 6, Issue 3 November 2016
- Volume 6, Issue 2 July 2016
- Volume 5 Issue 3 November 2015
- Volume 5 Issue 2 July 2015
- Volume 5 Issue 1 March 2015
- Volume 4 Issue 3
- Volume 4 Issue 2 July 2014
- Volume 4 Issue 1 March 2014
- Volume 3 Issue 3 November 2013
- Volume 3 Issue 2 July 2013
- Volume 3 Issue 1 March 2013
- Volume 2 Issue 3 November 2012
- Volume 2 Issue 2 July 2012
- Volume 2 Issue 1 March 2012
- Volume 1 Issue 2 November 2011
- Volume 1 Issue 1 July 2011
- Instructions to authors
- Volume 8 Issue 3 November 2018
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- The Idea of a Teacher: Paradigms of Change
- Zen and the Art of Classroom Identity Formation
- Book review: The Librarians’ Book on Teaching through Games and Play
- Moving from Learning Developers to Learning Development Practitioners
- Book review: The Mini Book of Teaching Tips for Librarians, 2nd Edition
- Academics’ International Teaching Journeys: Personal Narratives of Transition in Higher Education
- The Impact of Employability on Technology Acceptance in Students: Findings from Coventry 天美传媒 London
- Book review: Academics’ International Teaching Journeys: Personal Narratives of Transition in Higher Education
- Holistic Midwifery Education for Holistic Midwives: Reflecting on Personal Educational Philosophy and Pedagogy
- ‘In the Real World….’ Listening to ‘Practitioner Lecturer’ Perspectives of the Relevance in the Business School Curriculum
- “We don’t need to write to learn computer sciences”: Writing Instruction and the Question of First year, Later or Not at all
- Puppets and Pedagogy in Foreign Language Education: The Use of Bloom’s Revised Taxonomy to Model Hispanic Puppet Theatre as an Integrated Learning Platform
- Volume 8 Issue 2 July 2018
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- Book Reviews
- Why Do People Become Academics?
- Teaching Online (Book excerpt from a work in progress)
- Does a ‘Flipped Classroom’ Approach Add Learning Value?
- Lecture Capture: Reflections on Pedagogy vs. Perception
- Peer Review Activity and a Search Engine based Corpus System
- A Truly ‘Transformative’ MBA: Executive Education for the Fourth Industrial Revolution
- Developing Live Projects as Part of an Assessment Regime Within a Dispersed Campus Model
- The Nurse Associate Trainee Deserves a HOTSHOT Education: A Reflective Signature Pedagogical Approach
- Lessons etc
- Article 2
- Contents
- Volume 8, Issue 1 March 2018
- Volume 7, Issue 3 November 2017
- Volume 7, Issue 2 July 2017
- Volume 7, Issue 1 March 2017
- Volume 6, Issue 3 November 2016
- Volume 6, Issue 2 July 2016
- Volume 5 Issue 3 November 2015
- Volume 5 Issue 2 July 2015
- Volume 5 Issue 1 March 2015
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- A Dictionary of Research Concepts and Issues
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Arlie Russell Hochschild
- The Architecture of Productive Learning Networks
- Teaching Programming with Computational and Informational Thinking
- Writing in Social Spaces: A social processes approach to academic writing
- ‘So, you want us to do the marking?!’ – peer review and feedback to promote assessment as learning
- Telling timber tales in Higher Education: A reflection on my journey with digital storytelling
- The learning approaches of A Level History and Geography students analysed: a Report from a Sixth Form College
- I am not a superhero but I do have secret weapons! Using technology in Higher Education teaching to redress the power balance
- Open Futures: An enquiry and skills based educational programme developed for primary education and its use in tertiary education
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Jean Baudrillard
- Lo‐tech Tools as Episteme: Rethinking Student Engagement in the Writing Process and Beyond1
- Raising Awareness of Diversity and Social (In)justice Issues in Undergraduate Research Writing: Understanding Students and their Lives via Connecting Teaching and Research
- Volume 4 Issue 3
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- Book reviews
- The Imperial 天美传媒
- Success in Academic Writing
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers Dave Cormier
- Language Centre Online (and beyond)
- No Nonsense Guide to Training in Libraries
- English and Reflective Writing Skills in Medicine
- Philology: The Forgotten Origins of the Modern Humanities
- Internationalisation and curriculum development: why and how?
- Harkness Learning: Principles of a Radical American Pedagogy
- Growing Environmental Education and Sustainability Within Universities
- Official Knowledge: Democratic Education in a Conservative Age (3rd Edition)
- Preventing Too Little Too Late: A Novel Process of Continuous Curriculum Evaluation
- Peer Review of Learning and Teaching in Higher Education: International Perspectives
- Helping Students Connect: Architecting Learning Spaces for Experiential and Transactional Reflection
- A methodology for enhancing student writing in the discipline through complementary and collaborative working between central and school based writing development provision
- Volume 4 Issue 2 July 2014
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- A Pedagogic Trinity – Exploring the Art, Craft and Science of Teaching
- In Conversation with… Zoë Readhead, Principal of Summerhill School, Leiston, Suffolk
- Teaching with Infographics: Practicing New Digital Competencies and Visual Literacies
- WAC in FYW: Building Bridges and Teachers as Architects
- A personal journey of discoveries through a DIY open course development for professional development of teachers in Higher Education
- Materialities, Textures and Pedagogies
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers Anton Makarenko
- The Complexities of Teaching 'Inclusion' in Higher Education
- Research Methods in Information (2nd edition)
- Chasing Literacy: Reading and Writing in an Age of Acceleration
- Threshold Concepts: From Personal Practice to Communities of Practice
- Book reviews
- Volume 4 Issue 1 March 2014
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- Peer Tutoring
- Education and Immigration
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Sigmund Freud
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Vivien Hodgson
- Developing Employability for Business
- Assessment for Learning in Higher Education
- International Students Negotiating Higher Education
- A Handbook for Deterring Plagiarism in Higher Education
- 天美传媒 Teaching in Focus: A Learning Centred Approach
- Augmented didactics in Kindergarten12: An Italian Case History
- What constitutes 'peer support' within peer supported development?
- The Good Paper – A Handbook for Writing Papers in Higher Education
- Effective feedback: An indispensable tool for improvement in quality of medical education
- Writing in the Disciplines: Building Supportive Cultures for Student Writing in UK Higher Education
- A consideration of peer support and peer mentoring within the Professional Teaching Scheme (PTS) at the 天美传媒
- Increasing Student Engagement and Retention Using Social Technologies: Facebook, E portfolios and Other Social Networking Services
- Developing a Strategy based Instruction Approach to Teaching and Learning Modern Languages to train ab initio Primary PGCE Trainees
- Book Reviews
- The complexities and challenges of introducing electronic Ongoing Achievement Records in the pre registration nursing course using PebblePad and hand held tablets
- Volume 3 Issue 3 November 2013
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- Book reviews
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: R.J. Harris
- Transforming lives and 'the measure of their states'
- An Investigation into Students' Perceptions of Group Assignments
- Peer Support for Technology Enhanced Learning: developing a community of learners
- Developing Digital Literacy in Construction Management Education: A Design Thinking Led Approach
- Self Directed Learning in Osteopathic Education: identifying and enhancing independent student learning
- Challenges of developing pedagogy through diversity and equity within the new Early Years Foundation (EYFS) curriculum
- Classroom Based Action Research: Revisiting the Process as Customizable and Meaningful Professional Development for Educators
- Fly on the Wall: Can students' learning be enhanced by allowing them to witness their own summative assessment and feedback event?
- Information and Communication Technologies as means for self improvement at remote universities: the example of Urgench State 天美传媒, Uzbekistan
- Volume 3 Issue 2 July 2013
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- PAL at UoB!
- Book reviews
- PAL Experience
- Guest Editorial
- Celebrate Citation: Flipping the Pedagogy of Plagiarism in Qatar
- PAL Leader Training at Bournemouth 天美传媒: 12 years on and still evolving
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Paul Natorp
- Electracy: The Internet as Fifth Estate
- Facilitators and Barriers to the Development of PASS at the 天美传媒 of Brighton
- Pedagogical Inspiration through Martial Arts Instruction
- In response to ‘Celebrate Citation: Flipping the Pedagogy of Plagiarism in Qatar’
- Stress levels and their risk/protective factors among MSc Public Health students
- Citation Matters: Two Essays on the Student Journey of Citation and How Google Scholar and the Principle of Least Effort Can Affect Academic Writing
- Volume 3 Issue 1 March 2013
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- Book reviews
- Guest Editorial
- A multi dimensional approach to principalship
- Cross cultural collaboration with China
- Teachers and Research: What they value and what they do
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers Maria Cecília Calani Baranauskas
- Resilience in Adult Learners: some pedagogical implications
- Volunteer tourism and architecture students: What motivates and can best prepare them?
- Enhancing learner knowledge and the application of that knowledge via computer based assessment
- The Impact of an In service Professional Development Course on Writing Teacher Attitudes and Pedagogy
- Reflecting on Professional Practice: The Importance of Motivating Adolescent Girls in Physical Education
- Teachers' views on the introduction and implementation of literacy tasks in the Year 7 Science scheme of learning
- Reflecting on Professional Practice: The Importance of Motivating Adolescent Girls in Physical Education
- Volume 2 Issue 3 November 2012
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- Editorial
- Book reviews
- Transition Trauma
- Improving Course Related Information of Computing Degree Courses for Enhancing Learner Development
- Different Ways of Knowing
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Paulo Friere
- Ethical Issues in Pedagogical Research
- The Future For Primary Physical Education
- A Year on the Frontline Despatches from New FE Teachers
- Nurturing the independent thinking practitioner: using threshold concepts to transform undergraduate learning
- Volume 2 Issue 2 July 2012
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- Book Review
- Editorial The First Year
- HE in FE past, present and future
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Michael Wesch
- Crossing the boundaries of film and architectural pedagogy
- The CLE Writing Retreat 2012: 'Lifting the Mask of the Imposter'
- Simulation in Clinical Education: A Reflective and Critical Account
- Guest Editorial A Harmonics of Teaching and Learning: An Editorial in Three Voices
- VLE segregation or integration? How should distance learning and taught modes be treated?
- Reflecting on the Transition from Practice to Education The Journey to Becoming an Effective Teacher in Higher Education
- Volume 2 Issue 1 March 2012
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- Editorial
- Book Reviews
- Key Pedagogic Thinkers: Jaques Lacan
- Evaluation of a Global MBA programme
- Peer Assisted Learning: Project Update
- Student engagement and the role of feedback in learning
- Will health students engage with a health information blog
- Learning and Teaching in Business Through Rich and Varied Information Sources
- Thriving as an International Student: Personal responses and the trajectories they create
- Embedding a curriculum based information literacy programme at the 天美传媒
- Learning Beyond Compliance: A comparative analysis of two cohorts undertaking a first year social work module
- Volume 1 Issue 2 November 2011
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- Editorial
- Book reviews
- Moving Online
- The Gift of Dyslexia
- Open Educational Resources: Shared Solutions for Higher Education
- Information literacy and Web 2.0: developing a modern media curriculum using social bookmarking and social networking tools
- Reading Students' Expectations: a talking point
- Standing Up For Teaching: The 'Crime' of Striving for Excellence
- Can 'Quality Marking' be used to provide effective feedback within Higher Education?
- Scenario Based Evaluation of an Ethical Framework for the Use of Digital Media in Learning and Teaching
- Volume 1 Issue 1 July 2011
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- Editorial
- Book reviews
- I get by with a little help from my friends Peer Assisted Learning
- Research project: Effective academic posters and poster exhibitions
- Brands and movie making: Using storyboards to develop spatial design students' understanding of narrative
- Learning to chat: Developing a pedagogical framework for facilitating online synchronous tutorial discussion
- The role of perception in divergent approaches to teaching and learning through the transition from foundation to bachelor degree: a preliminary exploration
Threshold Concepts: From Personal Practice to Communities of Practice
By Catherine O'Mahony, Avril Buchanan, Mary O'Rourke & Bettie Higgs (eds.)
The Irish National Academy for Integration of Research, Teaching and Learning (2014)
Review by Eve Rapley
The January 2014 NAIRTL (National Academy for Integration of Research, Teaching and Learning) Threshold Concepts conference papers provide both breadth and depth, capturing and articulating both the essence and substance of Threshold Concepts. The span of papers ensures that both the largely uninitiated, and those with more knowledge and interest in this area of higher education pedagogy, are equally catered for. With a range of academic disciplines from geology, history, art, mathematics and engineering in which to contextualise underlying concepts, the papers and vignettes successfully tread the path between inaccessible and esoteric theory, and an atheoretical 'dummies guide' approach.
In addition to the breadth of disciplines featured, papers focus on undergraduate, postgraduate and international students and cases, as well as those from our own shores and those further afield. With a spectrum of methodological diversity from the 'tried and tested', to those championing the evolutionary nature of Threshold Concepts, the proceedings present a veritable smorgasbord of approaches and angles. Sensibly put together into five clearly orientated sections, the proceedings are logically ordered, with each paper being short, yet, on the whole, packing a punch. It is perhaps this snappy writing approach which makes the collection so entirely readable and worth any HE teacher taking a look at.
As an HE teacher, I am well acquainted with the difficulties oft cited and experienced by students as they grapple, often with difficulty, with the notion of moving towards and through liminal spaces; spaces where students encounter 'troublesome knowledge' and find themselves unable to move beyond it; a 'stuck place'. I have seen first-hand, genuine discomfort and confusion from students as they begin to face the prospect of their hitherto acquired knowledge and certainties being challenged and, at times, turned inside out and given a metaphorical shake. Everything previously and unquestioningly held as being the truth can begin to morph and change, creating a state of confusion and a raft of questions and nascent hypotheses. Referred to in the literature as ontological shift, it is this notion of philosophical positioning that is so conceptually difficult to contend with, yet is presented so neatly and accessibly within this collection.
The keynote by Professor Ray Land, a renowned founding father of Threshold Concepts, adds some serious intellectual weight to the proceedings, giving the reader both something of a crash course in underlying principles, as well as a particularly potent re-visiting and re-imagining of the oft-cited definitions and constructs. Whereas much that is written about Threshold Concepts tends to dwell upon the negative and the aspects of difficulty and confusion, Land opts for an altogether more positive tack. Whilst he acknowledges the disorientating and unsettling nature of being on the wrong side of a Threshold Concept, and of the journey through to the other side, he invites readers to see a 'stuck place' as a place for student re-awakenings and a place to be embraced as one as a space for transformation, not merely as somewhere for students to struggle and to merely 'get through'. He talks of liminal spaces as being difficult, but also in terms of being 'emergent鈥here emergent identities arise'. He also talks of them being a place where previously held truths and ways of viewing the world have to be jettisoned, to be 'let go' in order that the new ways of thinking can come into existence. He portrays this letting go as both necessary and emancipatory. His vigorous assertion that Threshold Concepts and liminal spaces are there to be seized and acknowledged as being places both for pleasure and pain, are cogently presented.
Belinda Allen's paper continues this theme of adopting an optimistic embrace, rather than a fearful cower. Her talk of students moving towards and through Threshold Concepts and liminal spaces in terms of 'liberation', 'receptiveness' and 'growth' all chime with Land (and many of the other authors from the collection), again offering up an altogether more positive and alternative reading of what has sometimes been considered a concept firmly rooted in the realms of theory, and not the applied.
The quietly impressive range of papers within the collection abundantly illustrates the multidimensional nature of Threshold Concepts. They take the reader beyond the standard reading of Glynis Cousin's notions of Threshold Concepts being 'betwixt and between conceptual mastery'. They paint an altogether more rich and practical portrait that HE teachers might meaningfully take to re-shape their own practice. The emphasis on teachers needing to be mindful of Threshold Concepts, to assist students in negotiating their way through, and to tolerate confusion, is eloquently yet purposefully stated. A number of papers talk in detail about the need for HE teachers to identify their own disciplinary Threshold Concepts, to acknowledge their existence and to develop a pedagogy both to promote learning, and to decrease teacher frustration.
At a time when much is written in both the popular press and academic literature about the very nature and purpose of higher education (often in response to concerns about deficits in criticality and higher thinking from undergraduates), this publication could not be more appositely timed. As university teachers, it also highlights the question that we've been asking ourselves since time immemorial: 'Why don't they get it?' Perhaps reading this will put us all in a better place to address the question, and to come at this age old problem from a different, and more enlightened space.
address
Academy for Learning and Teaching Excellence
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