DocumentCode
3563111
Title
Learning to learn: The co-evolution of an institution and its students
Author
Dziallas, Sebastian ; Fincher, Sally
Author_Institution
Comput., Franklin W. Olin Coll. of Eng., Franklin, CA, USA
fYear
2014
Firstpage
1
Lastpage
7
Abstract
In this study, we report on the student experience at Olin College, a small undergraduate university in the United States with an explicit mission to transform engineering education. We employ a highly narrative approach to situate students´ individual experiences within their larger learning trajectories and use them as a lens through which we view the accounts of their time at college. We highlight a series of themes: from often successful, but traditional high school experiences to an academic dislocation in the first year in college that reinforces fundamentally different values of what it means to be an engineer. The resulting dissonance (and inherent wrestling) students experience as they adjust into an environment that values interdisciplinary activities and student autonomy emerged as a central theme of this study. We connect these themes to shifts in motivation and accountable disciplinary knowledge to reveal what it means for college students to `learn beyond success´.
Keywords
educational administrative data processing; educational institutions; engineering education; further education; Olin College; United States; academic dislocation; college students; disciplinary knowledge; engineering education; high school experiences; learning trajectories; student individual experiences; undergraduate university; Context; Educational institutions; Engineering education; Interviews; Knowledge engineering; Materials; education research; narrative methodology; student experience; student pathways;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Frontiers in Education Conference (FIE), 2014 IEEE
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/FIE.2014.7044126
Filename
7044126
Link To Document