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An exploration of the nature of transformative learning and transformative pedagogy in a high PDF

322 Pages·2014·15.41 MB·English
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An Exploration of the Nature of Transformative Learning and Transformative Pedagogy in a High School English Context Susan Jane Marks Bachelor of Arts (Honours), University of Sydney Diploma of Education, Sydney Institute of Education Associate of Trinity College, London (Piano Teaching) A dissertation submitted in fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy within the Faculty of Education at the University of Tasmania. April 2005 Dedication This thesis is dedicated to the memory of Associate Professor Bill Maidment, the most wonderful teacher I have known. Being his student shaped me in significant ways that continue to have an impact on my teaching and on who I am as a person. This thesis explores the nature of transformative learning and transformative pedagogy. It is fitting that it is dedicated to a profoundly transformative educator. Declaration This work has not previously been submitted for a degree or diploma in any university. To the best of my knowledge and belief, the thesis contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due acknowledgment is made in the text of the thesis. Susan Marks Authority of Access This thesis may be made available for loan and limited copying in accordance with the Copyright Act 1968. Susan Marks 1 Abstract This study explores the nature of learning that transforms established frames of reference for those who engage in it. It also explores the nature of pedagogy that is likely to foster this transformative learning. It is based on the explorations of the teacher-researcher as she reflects on the learning experiences of some of her students and on her own teaching practice. The teacher-researcher's reflections emanate from her experiences teaching high school English to Years 10 and 11 students within a co-educational school in Sydney. Through engaging in hermeneutic phenomenological research, the teacher-researcher explores the types of learning contexts and pedagogical approaches that may be effective in fostering transformative learning. The literature review highlights the fact that explorations of the nature of transformative learning and transformative pedagogy have occurred almost exclusively within the domain of adult education and many researchers have expressed the view that this is a uniquely adult phenomenon. In exploring the transformative learning experiences of students between the ages of fifteen and seventeen, this study calls into question the view that only adults may experience transformative learning. It also raises awareness about the significance of transformative pedagogy in a high school context. The study highlights a number of pedagogical practices that are potentially transformative and concludes that transformative learning is most effectively fostered through relational forms of knowing emerging in dialogical learning contexts. Critical reflection is seen as being central to transformative learning and the importance of both affective and cognitive dimensions in the process of critical reflection is emphasised. Within a high school English context, the value of introducing students to a range of texts that may expose them to alternative ways of seeing is highlighted. The study demonstrates that integral to transformative pedagogy is the importance of providing students with both challenging learning experiences and with scaffolds designed to equip them to meet these challenges. The personally transformative nature of engaging in teacher-research is also highlighted and this is seen to have implications for models of staff professional development within schools. Reference is made to the limitations of the study, including those associated with being a teacher-researcher. As with other phenomenological studies, the findings do not purport to have direct and specific relevance to other contexts, although they may prove interesting to others interested in fostering transformative learning through transformative pedagogy. Acknowledgments I am immensely grateful for the constant support given to me by my family throughout this research. In particular, I extend my thanks to my mother and father, Kay and Neil Marks, whose love, support and encouragement have been instrumental in carrying me through the vicissitudes that inevitably accompany a work of this length. My sister, Sandy Green, and my brother-in-law, Malcolm Green, provided me with encouragement throughout the project and I extend special thanks to my other sister, Vicki Marks, who assisted me with the layout of the final manuscript. My deceased grandmother, Lilian Marks, was also a great support in the early stages of my research, reminding me on a regular basis that she believed in me. About half way through the project, I met and married my husband, Arun Gordon. I offer him my grateful thanks for his loving patience and support that have sustained me through the final stages of the thesis marathon. I also extend thanks to my close friends, Astrid Eggins, Tracy Allan, Sarah Walters and Annette Fritze-Shanks for their unstinting encouragement. I am particularly thankful to my dear friend, Leonie Armstrong, who not only offered me great encouragement throughout the project, but also read the final manuscript. I also appreciate the invaluable assistance of Angelina Russell and Tim Ryan who assisted with the layout and formatting of the thesis. I offer my thanks to Dr Roderic Kefford, the principal of the school at which I was both a teacher and researcher, for his interest in my research and for his encouragement and support. I am also thankful for other colleagues, too numerous to name, who have shown a genuine interest in my research and who have afforded me opportunities to engage in dialogue about pedagogy. In this regard, I extend my special thanks to Brad Merrick for his encouragement and for the many stimulating discussions we have had about our respective fields of educational research. iv My indebtedness to my students, whose experiences form the basis of this study, will be clearly evident to anyone who reads this thesis. I am grateful to them for their curiosity, courage, good humour and generosity of spirit. Finally, it is with deep gratitude that I acknowledge the support, encouragement and expertise of my supervisor, Professor Roslyn Arnold. Her particular field of expertise lies in the area of empathic intelligence and I thank her not only for sharing with me what she knows about this area, but for being a living testimony to its transformative power. Table of Contents Chapter 1 — Introduction: The Origins and Purpose of the Study 1.1 The Genesis of the Study 1 1.2 Purpose and Scope of the Research and the Research Question 2 1.3 Brief Overview of the Study 5 1.4 Significance of the Study 6 Chapter 2— Transformative Learning Theory and Pedagogical Practice: A Review of Literature 2.1 The Research Question and the Literature Review 9 2.2 Transformative Learning: Definitional Issues 10 2.2.1 Introduction 10 2.2.2 Meaning Schemes, Frames of Reference and Perspective Transformation 11 2.2.3 Domains of Learning 12 2.2.4 The Centrality of Experience, Critical Reflection and Reflective Discourse 13 2.2.5 The Focus of the Study 15 2.3 Transformative Learning: Adults Only9 16 2.4 Models of Transformative Learning 19 2.5 The Fusion of Rationality, Emotion and Other Ways of Knowing 21 2.6 The Importance of Empathic Learning Contexts 24 2.7 Autonomous versus Relational Knowing: A False Dichotomy 28 2.8 Individual versus Social Transformation and the Issue of Power 30 2.9 Fostering Transformative Learning Through Transformative Pedagogy 34 vi 2.9.1 The Value of Transformative Learning and Transformative Pedagogy: Different Perspectives 34 2.9.2 Creating Disorienting Dilemmas 37 2.9.3 The Application and Testing of Ideal Learning Conditions for Transformative Learning 39 2.10 The Intention and Organisation of This Study 39 Chapter 3— The Methodology Mosaic: Piecing Together a Path for Discovery 3.1 Nothing Comes From Nothing: The Research Question, Tacit Knowing and Reflection-in-Action 44 3.2 The Two Shall Become One: The Symbiotic Nature of the Teacher-Researcher 47 3.3 The Deep and the Meaningful: Subjective Reality for Teacher- Researchers and Qualitative Research 50 3.4 Phenomenology 57 3.4.1 The Wide World of Phenomenology 57 3.4.2 Hermeneutic Phenomenology 61 3.4.3 Van Manen's Hermeneutic Phenomenological Approach to Human Science Research 62 3.5 The Scope of the Research 65 3.6 Turning the Kaleidoscope: Finding Helpful Research Methods 66 3.6.1 A Kaleidoscopic Vision 66 3.6.2 Learning Logs 68 3.6.3 Reflection Statements 71 3.6.4 Peer Mentor Reviews 72 3.6.5 Critical and Imaginative Writing 72 3.6.6 Focus Group Interviews 73 3.6.7 Conversations 75 vii 3.6.8 Observation 76 3.7 Articulations of Life Works in Progress 77 Chapter 4— The Transformative Power of Dialogism in Teaching, Learning and Research 4.1 Dialogism 79 4.2 Unfolding Narratives 80 4.3 Dialogic Research 81 4.4 Reflective Discourse and the Dialogic Classroom 83 4.5 Descriptions of a Dialogic Classroom 85 4.6 The Confronting Nature of the Dialogic Classroom 92 4.7 The Dialogic Classroom and Transformative Learning and Pedagogy 101 4.8 The Art of Pedagogy in the Dialogic Classroom 105 Chapter 5— The Role of Peer Mentoring in Transformative Learning 5.1 The Importance of Peer Support 109 5.2 Mentoring in a Historical Context 111 5.3 The Context for the Peer Mentor Program 112 5.4 A Peer Mentor as a Sounding-Board 114 5.5 Mentoring and Metacognition: A Transformative Connection 117 5.6 The Affective Benefits of the Peer Mentor Program 122 5.7 Peer Mentor Relationships: The Compatibility Factor 127 5.8 Degrees of Involvement and the Tyranny of Time 136 5.9 Mutually Supportive Peer Partnerships: A Key Dimension of Transformative Learning 138 viii

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