/
Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge

Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge - PowerPoint Presentation

Savageheart
Savageheart . @Savageheart
Follow
342 views
Uploaded On 2022-08-04

Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge - PPT Presentation

A transformational approach to learning Ray Land Strathclyde University Glasgow UK University of York Annual Learning and Teaching Conference 25th th May 2011 Troublesome knowledge Real learning requires stepping into the unknown which initiates a rupture in knowing ID: 935274

threshold learning knowledge concepts learning threshold concepts knowledge concept students troublesome student understanding world experience underlying uncertainty land 2006

Share:

Link:

Embed:

Download Presentation from below link

Download Presentation The PPT/PDF document "Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowl..." is the property of its rightful owner. Permission is granted to download and print the materials on this web site for personal, non-commercial use only, and to display it on your personal computer provided you do not modify the materials and that you retain all copyright notices contained in the materials. By downloading content from our website, you accept the terms of this agreement.


Presentation Transcript

Slide1

Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge A transformational approach to learning

Ray Land, Strathclyde University, Glasgow UK

University of York Annual Learning and Teaching Conference 25thth May 2011

Slide2

Troublesome knowledge

Slide3

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

Slide4

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

Slide5

pax intrantibus, salus exeuntibus (1609)

Slide6

Slide7

I am part of all that I have met;Yet all experience is an arch wherethro’

Gleams that untravell’d world, whose margin fades

For ever and for ever when I move.

Tennyson ‘

Ulysses’

Slide8

Threshold conceptsLiminalityTroublesome knowledgeEpisteme (the underlying game)

Slide9

Causes of conceptual (or other)difficulty?

Slide10

The role of the teacher is to arrange victories for the students Quintilian 35-100 AD

Slide11

The prevailing discourse of ‘outcomes’, ‘alignment’ and ‘achievement’ has, from critical perspectives, been deemed to serve managerialist imperatives without necessarily engaging discipline-based academics in significant reconceptualisation or review of their practice.

(cf.Newton, 2000).

Slide12

Academics’ own definitions of quality would seem to remain predominantly discipline-centred

(cf. Henkel, 2000:106).

Slide13

Notion that within specific disciplines there exist significant ‘threshold concepts’, leading to new and previously inaccessible ways of thinking about something. (Meyer and Land, 2003).

Slide14

‘Concept?’‘a unit of thought or element of knowledge that allows us to organize experience’

Janet Gail Donald (2001)

‘Learning to Think: Disciplinary Perspectives’

Slide15

James Joyce’s ‘epiphany’ — the ‘revelation of the whatness of a thing’.

But threshold concepts are both more constructed and re-constitutive than revelatory, and not necessarily sudden. (

eurhka!)

Slide16

Akin to a portal, a liminal space, opening up a new and previously inaccessible way of thinking about something. Represents a transformed way of understanding, or interpreting, or viewing something without which the learner finds it difficult to progress, within the curriculum as formulated.

Threshold Concepts

Slide17

Threshold ConceptsAs a consequence of comprehending a threshold concept there may thus be a transformed internal view of subject matter, subject landscape, or even world view. Such a transformed view or landscape may represent how people ‘think’ in a particular discipline, or how they perceive, apprehend, or experience particular phenomena within that discipline, or more generally.

Slide18

However the engagement by the learner with an unfamiliar knowledge terrain and the ensuing reconceptualisation may involve a reconstitution of, or shift within, the learner’s subjectivity, and perhaps identity.

Ontological implications. Learning as ‘a change in subjectivity’. (Pelletier 2007).

Slide19

Liminality

a transformative state that engages existing certainties and renders them problematic, and fluida suspended state in which understanding can approximate to a kind of mimicry or lack of authenticity

liminality as unsettling – sense of loss

Slide20

First student: I understood it in class, it was when we went away and I just seemed to have completely forgotten everything that we did on it, and I think that was when I struggled because when we were sat in here, we’d obviously got help if we had questions but…..when it came to applying it….I understood the lectures and everything that we did on it but couldn’t actually apply it, I think that was the difficulty. from G. Cousin, Journal of Learning Development Feb 2010

Slide21

Q. Did you feel the same as student 1? Second student: Yeah. I felt lost. Q. In lecture times as well? Second student: You know, I understood the concept for about let’s say 10 seconds, yes yes, I got that and then suddenly, no no, I didn’t get that, you know, suddenly, like this. from G. Cousin, Journal of Learning Development

Feb 2010

Slide22

Well, from not knowing what it is to knowing what it is, that is the big step one. So that can be knowing how to apply the concepts that we use. There are some things you learn, you suddenly think, wow, suddenly everything seems different…you now see the world quite differently. from G. Cousin, Journal of Learning Development Feb 2010

Slide23

Janus – divinity of the threshold

epistemological

ontological

Slide24

Characteristics of a threshold concept integrativetransformativeirreversiblebounded

re-constitutivediscursivetroublesome

Slide25

East of Eden through the threshold

Slide26

Some natural tears they dropped, but wiped them soon;The world was all before them, where to chooseTheir place of rest, and Providence their guide.They, hand in hand, with wandering steps and slow,

Through Eden took their solitary way. John Milton (Paradise Lost, Book XII

; 1667)

Slide27

Slide28

ExamplesPure Maths – ‘complex number, a

limit’, the Fourier transform’Literary Studies – ‘signification, deconstruction, ethical reading’

Economics – ‘opportunity cost, price, elasticity’Design – ‘Confidence to challenge’Computer Science – ‘programming’, ‘Y and Recursion’Exercise Physiology – ‘metabolism’Law - ‘precedence’

Accounting - ‘depreciation’

Biology, Psychology - ‘evolution’

Politics

– ‘the state’

Engineering – ‘reactive power’, ‘spin’

History – ‘Asiatic Conceptions of Time’

Comparative Religion– ‘Biblical texts as Literary Texts’

Plant Science ‘Photoprotection’

Health Science – ‘Care’

Physics – ‘Gravity’

Geology - ‘Geologic Time’

Slide29

Opportunity CostOpportunity cost in any particular choice is, of course, influenced by prior choices that have been made, but with respect to this choice itself, opportunity cost is choice-influencing

rather than choice-influenced’ Thus, if ‘accepted’ by the individual student as a valid way of interpreting the world, it fundamentally changes their way of thinking about their own choices, as well as serving as a tool to interpret the choices made by others

. (Shanahan, 2002)

Slide30

They view statistics as a branch of mathematics because it uses mathematical formulas, so they look at statistics through a mathematical lens. What they are missing is the statistical lens through which to view the world, allowing this world to make sense. The concept of sampling distribution is this statistical lens. My own experience discovering this lens was a revelation, akin to the experience I had when I put on my first pair of eyeglasses – suddenly everything was sharp and clear. (Kennedy, 1998 p.142)

Sampling Distribution

Slide31

Reflection (deep learning) (Schwartzman 2009)As a result of deep learning, one switches dynamically -- within the same field of consciousness -- among thematic foci, with correspondent restructuring of thematic fields. The total set of elements in the field remains constant, while boundaries among the thematic focus, the thematic field, and the margin become fluid; and component elements shift between adjacent domains. The mechanism of dynamic switching among extant elements corresponds to reflection

; the operation corresponds to refinement and clarification of one's extant meaning frame.

Slide32

Reflectiveness (transformative learning) (Schwartzman 2009)As a result of transformative learning, in contrast, the contents of the field of consciousness change. Elements formerly not found in any domain of consciousness, possibly including component parts of elements formerly classified as nondecomposable, now occupy the thematic focus or reside in the thematic field; and some elements formerly found there are now relegated to the margin. The mechanism remains mysterious and corresponds to reflectiveness;

the operation, which results in a different population in the field of consciousness, corresponds to reformulation of one's meaning frame.

Slide33

When troubles come they come not single spies, but in battalions

(Hamlet Act 4 Sc 5 ll 83-84)

Troublesome Knowledge

Slide34

looking for troubleKnowledge is troublesome for a variety of reasons (Perkins 2006). It might be alien, inert, tacit, conceptually difficult, counter-intuitive, characterised by an inaccessible ‘underlying game’, or characterised by supercomplexity. such troublesomeness and disquietude is purposeful, as it is the provoker of change that cannot be assimilated, and hence is the instigator of new learning and new ontological possibility.

Slide35

Troublesome knowledgeritual knowledgeinert knowledgeconceptually difficult knowledgethe defended learneralien knowledge

tacit knowledgeloaded knowledgetroublesome language

Slide36

A relational view of the features of a threshold concept

Slide37

Episteme: ‘the underlying game’‘…a system of ideas or way of understanding that allows us to establish knowledge. ..the importance of students understanding the structure of the disciplines they are studying. ‘Ways of knowing’ is another phrase in the same spirit. As used here, epistemes are manners of justifying, explaining, solving problems, conducting enquiries, and designing and validating various kinds of products or outcomes.’

(Perkins 2006 p.42)

‘knowledge practices’ (Strathearn 2008)

Slide38

Double trouble: ‘games of enquiry’Concepts can prove difficult both in their categorical function and in the activity systems or ‘games of enquiry’ they support. Not only content concepts but the underlying epistemes of the disciplines make trouble for learners, with confusion about content concepts often reflecting confusion about the underlying epistemes.

(Perkins 2006 p.45)

Slide39

Intellectual uncertainty ‘Intellectual uncertainty is not necessarily or simply a negative experience, a dead-end sense of not knowing, or of indeterminacy. It is just as well an experience of something open, generative, exhilarating, (the trembling of what remains undecidable). I wish to suggest that ‘intellectual uncertainty’ is ..a crucial dimension of any teaching worthy of the name.’ (Royle 2003 : 52)

Slide40

Venturing into strange places The student is perforce required to venture into new places, strange places, anxiety-provoking places . This is part of the point of higher education. If there was no anxiety, it is difficult to believe that we could be in the presence of a higher education.

(Barnett 2007: 147)

Slide41

Pedagogies of uncertainty it's ... insufficient to claim that a combination of theory, practice, and ethics defines a professional's work; it is also characterized by conditions of inherent and unavoidable uncertainty.

Professionals rarely can employ simple algorithms or protocols of practice in performing their services. How then does a professional adapt to new and uncertain circumstances? She exercises judgment. (Shulman 2005:1)

Slide42

Pedagogies of uncertainty That anxiety derives from the risk involved in putting forward ideas and defending them, from knowing that one must be prepared for class, from the fear of making a fool of oneself. The anxiety is either adaptive or paralyzing. Managing levels of anxiety is a major responsibility of the teacher, but is also a responsibility of the collective. Because they all feel it, students must learn how to simultaneously challenge and support each other's thinking.

(Shulman 2005:4)

Slide43

Pedagogies of uncertainty In these settings, the presence of emotion, even a modicum of passion, is quite striking--as is its absence in other settings. I would say that without a certain amount of anxiety and risk, there's a limit to how much learning occurs.

One must have something at stake. No emotional investment, no intellectual or formational yield. (Shulman 2005:4)

Slide44

Decoding the Disciplines What is a bottleneck to learning in this class?How does an expert do these things?How can these tasks be explicitly modelled?

How will students practise these skills and get feedback?What will motivate the students?How well are students mastering these learning tasks?

How can the resulting knowledge about learning be shared?(Middendorf, J. and Pace,D. 2004)

Slide45

TenConsiderations for Course Design

Slide46

1 jewels in the curriculum Threshold concepts can be used to define potentially powerful transformative points in the student’s learning experience. In this sense they may be viewed as the

‘jewels in the curriculum’.

Slide47

2 importance of engagement Existing literature regarding teachers who want students to develop genuine understanding of a difficult concept points to the need for engagement

eg. They must ask students to explain it represent it in new ways

apply it in new situations connect it to their lives   and NOT simply recall the concept in the form in which it was presented (Colby, et.al, 2003: p263) .

Slide48

3 listening for understanding However, teaching for understanding needs to be preceded by

listening for understanding. We can’t second guess where students are coming from or what their uncertainties are. It is difficult for teachers to gaze backwards across thresholds.

Slide49

4 reconstitution of self Grasping a concept is never just a cognitive shift; it also involves a

repositioning of self in relation to the subject. This means from the viewpoint of curriculum design that some attention has to be paid to the discomforts of troublesome knowledge

Slide50

5 recursiveness The need for the learner to grasp threshold concepts in recursive movements means that they

cannot be tackled in a simplistic 'learning outcomes' model where sentences like 'by the end of the course the learner will be able to....’ undermine the complexities of the transformation a learner undergoes (post-liminal variation).

Consideration of threshold concepts to some extent ‘rattles the cage’ of a linear, outcomes-based approach to curriculum design.

Slide51

6 tolerating uncertainty Learners tend to discover that what is not clear initially often becomes clear over time. So there is a metacognitive issue for the student (self-regulation within the liminal state) and a need for the teacher to provide

a ‘holding environment' (Winnicott 1960)

Slide52

Dynamics of Assessment

7

Slide53

Implies need to reconsider the nature of stimulus, protocol and signification in assessment practicesWhy do some students productively negotiate the liminal space and others find difficulty in doing so? Does such variation

explain how the threshold will be, or can be, or can only be approached (or turned away from) as it ‘comes into view’? And how does it ‘come into view’?

Slide54

problem of signification of a particular understanding when the concept is outwith the domain of prior experienceneed to monitor progress by revealing thought processes that generally remain private and troublesome to the learner (Cohen, 1987).in traditional assessment, a student can produce the ‘right’ answer while retaining fundamental misconceptions (Marek, 1986).potential value of concept mapping to explore such variation

(Kinchin and Hay 2006)

Slide55

Slide56

8 contestability of generic ‘good pedagogy’ There is emerging indicative evidence that the ‘good pedagogy’ of relating concepts to everyday phenomena, or simplifying them, can break down, eg depreciation, opportunity cost.

Slide57

9 the underlying game (sub-liminal variation)

The need to recognise the ‘games of enquiry we play’ (Perkins 2006). Disciplines are more than bundles of concepts. They have their own characteristic epistemes. Need for students to recognise the ‘underlying episteme’ or game and develop epistemic fluency.

Slide58

10 professional development Possibility of using thresholds framework to design more discipline-specific programmes of professional development.

Slide59

interdisciplinarity

Slide60

monocularism:the gaze of the Cyclops

Slide61

Slide62

The expanding framework

http://www.ee.ucl.ac.uk/~mflanaga/thresholds.html

Year

No of refs.

2003

2

2004

3

2005

6

2006

33

2007

35

2008

51

2009

53

2010

114

11 theses and dissertations

Links to video,

ppt

presentations and other TCF websites

78 discipilinary/subject categories

Mick Flanagan

3)

The expanding framework

78 disciplinary/subject categories

Slide63

Slide64

ReferencesMeyer JHF and Land R 2003 Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge – Linkages to Ways of Thinking and Practising’ in

Improving Student Learning – Ten Years On. C.Rust (Ed), OCSLD, Oxford

Meyer JHF and Land R 2005 ‘Threshold Concepts and Troublesome Knowledge (2): epistemological considerations and a conceptual framework for teaching and learning’ Higher Education, May.

Land, R., Cousin, G., Meyer, J. H. F. & Davies, P. (2005)

Threshold concepts and troublesome knowledge (3): implications for course design and evaluation, in: C. Rust (Ed.)

Improving student learning: diversity and inclusivity

(Oxford, OCSLD), 53–64.

Slide65

ray.land@strath.ac.uk