1st Edition

Active Learning and Student Engagement International Perspectives and Practices in Geography in Higher Education

Edited By Mick Healey, Eric Pawson, Michael Solem Copyright 2010
    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    232 Pages
    by Routledge

    This book examines significant issues in geography teaching and learning from the perspectives of an international network of academic geographers and postgraduate students. Drawing on classroom experiences and research in a wide variety of educational settings, the authors describe conceptually interesting and practical applications for enhancing student learning through inquiry, problem-based learning, field study, online collaboration, and other highly engaging forms of pedagogy. Other articles focus on approaches for improving the experiences of distance learners, strategies for enhancing the employability of geography students, and preparing students to engage ethical issues in the discipline.

    An international audience of educators will find much of value through the use of comparative examples, literature reviews encompassing research in multiple national contexts, and an underlying awareness of the diversity of practices in higher education internationally.

    This book is a collection of articles previously published in two special issues of the Journal of Geography in Higher Education.

    1. Active Learning and Student Engagement  Mick Healey, Eric Pawson and Michael Solem  Re-imagining ourselves as learners  2 Co-learning: Re-Linking Research and Teaching in Geography Richard Le Heron, Richard Baker, Lindsey McEwen with John Bradbeer, Alan Jenkins and Gabor Mezosi  3 ‘None of Us Sets Out To Hurt People’: The Ethical Geographer and Geography Curricula in Higher Education  William E. Boyd, Ruth L. Healey, Susan W. Hardwick, Martin Haigh with Phil Klein, Bruce Doran, Julie Trafford and John Bradbeer  Engaging students in inquiry  4 Experimenting with active learning in Geography: Dispelling the myths that Perpetuate Resistance  Regina Scheyvens, Amy L. Griffin, Christine L. Jocoy, Yan Liu and Michael Bradford  5 Problem based learning in Geography: towards a critical assessment of its purposes, benefits and risks  Eric Pawson, Julie Trafford, Eric Fournier, Martin Haigh, Osvaldo Muniz and Susan Vajoczki  6 Where might sand dunes be on mars? Engaging students through Inquiry-based learning in Geography  Rachel Spronken-Smith, Jo Bullard, Waverly Ray, Carolyn Roberts and Artimus Keiffer  7 International perspectives on the Effectiveness of Geography fieldwork for learning Ian Fuller, Sally Edmonson, Derek France, David Higgitt and Ikka Ratinen  New spaces of learning  8 Developing and Enhancing international collaborative learning  David Higgitt, Karl Donert, Mick Healey, Phil Klein, Michael Solem and Sue Vajoczki  9 E-learning for Geography's teaching and learning spaces  Kenneth Lynch, Bob Bednarz, James Boxall, Lex Chalmers, Derek France and Julie Kesby   10 Strength in diversity: Enhancing learning in vocationally-orientated, Master's level courses  Lindsey McEwen, Janice Monk, Iain Hay, Pauline Kneale and Helen King  11 Teaching for and about social transformation  Jane Wellens, Andrea Berardi, Brian Chalkley, Bill Chambers, Ruth Healey, Janice Monk and Jodi Vender  Beyond the classroom  12 Community engagement for student learning in Geography  Sarah Witham Bednarz, Brian Chalkley, Stephen Fletcher, Iain Hay, Erena Le Heron, Audrey Mohan and Julie Trafford  13 Enhancing employability in Geography  Paul Rooney, Barbara Gambini, Artimus Keiffer, Pauline Kneale, Barbara Van Drasek and Sharon Gedye  14 Internationalising professional development in Geography through distance education  Michael Solem, Lex Chalmers, David DiBiase, Karl Donert and Susan Hardwick   15 Reflecting on Student Engagement  Eric Pawson, Mick Healey and Michael Solem

    Biography

    Mick Healey is Professor of Geography, University of Gloucestershire, UK, and Senior Adviser for Geography for the National Subject Centre for Geography, Earth and Environmental Sciences. He is a National Teaching Fellow and Senior Fellow of the Higher Education Academy and has twice been awarded the Journal of Geography in Higher Education Biennial Award for Promoting Excellence in Teaching and Learning.

    Eric Pawson is Professor of Geography, University of Canterbury, New Zealand. He is a teaching award winner, a former Head of Department, and member of the Social Science Panel of the Royal Society of New Zealand’s Marsden Research Fund.

    Michael Solem is Educational Affairs Director at the Association of American Geographers, where he directs several federally funded initiatives supporting geography education in the United States and internationally. His research (with Ken Foote) on geography faculty development was recognized by the Journal of Geography in Higher Education’s Biennial Award for Promoting Excellence in Teaching and Learning.