Using phenomenography to explore the relationship between students perceptions of the learning context of their first-year engineering course and their approaches to learning.

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Date

2006-10-26T10:30:15Z

Authors

Henning, Lesley Ann.

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Abstract

Phenomenography is an area of research which focuses on identifying and describing the qualitatively different ways in which people understand phenomena in the world around them. In this research, a group of first-year chemical engineering students at the University of the Witwatersrand were interviewed in order to explore their perceptions of certain aspects of the learning context of their compulsory engineering course, Introduction to Process and Materials Engineering. The findings comprise descriptions of their different perceptions concerning the organization, content, teaching and assessment practices in the course as well as their perceptions of certain aspects of constructivism on which the course is based. Students’ perceptions which influence their approach to learning are categorized according to whether or not they encourage a deep approach to learning. Finally, the implications of these findings for future course development are discussed.

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Faculty of Humanities School of Education 8802108f

Keywords

Learning, Context, Approaches, Engineering Education, Motivation

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