Overview
- Introduces the concept of disciplinary intuitions, and foregrounds the tacit proto-understandings and sensings as distinct from prior knowledge
- Explores the design of curricula and technology-augmented learning environments for more enduring understanding
- Initiates a provocative debate into contemporary understandings of curriculum design with regards the nature of intuitions as varying across traditional subject domains
- Includes supplementary material: sn.pub/extras
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Table of contents (14 chapters)
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Theoretical and Historical Foundations
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Delving into Disciplines
Keywords
About this book
As children, we would have spilt glasses of milk, dropped things, and broken things. As children, therefore, we would have developed intuitions about how the world ‘works’, but we would not necessarily have been able to explain these ‘workings’. It would only have been till we entered formal schooling that we would have learned codifications of canon within each respective discipline, and consequently how to articulate the canon to explain the intuition.
The preceding example was from the natural sciences, but one could just have easily taken an example from, say, the environmental sciences or from the social sciences. Indeed, much of this book does just that, as it seeks to chart the territory of a new theory of learning around Disciplinary Intuitions.
Editors and Affiliations
About the editor
Bibliographic Information
Book Title: Disciplinary Intuitions and the Design of Learning Environments
Editors: Kenneth Y. T. Lim
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/978-981-287-182-4
Publisher: Springer Singapore
eBook Packages: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law, Education (R0)
Copyright Information: Springer Science+Business Media Singapore 2015
Hardcover ISBN: 978-981-287-181-7Published: 04 November 2014
Softcover ISBN: 978-981-10-1168-9Published: 11 September 2016
eBook ISBN: 978-981-287-182-4Published: 19 October 2014
Edition Number: 1
Number of Pages: XXIII, 201
Number of Illustrations: 31 b/w illustrations
Topics: Curriculum Studies, Learning & Instruction, Educational Psychology