Project work, independence and critical thinking
Abstract
This thesis studies how students do projects in a Swedish upper secondary school. The students have to produce products and at the same time prove them self as independent in relation to the teachers, and negotiate the requirements of the project setting and the written instructions within the group. The study focuses on what comes out as problematic for the students, how they solve these dilemma situations and what resources are used in order to do so.
A choice was made only to analyse student group interaction in parts of the project process where the teachers were not physically present thus filling a research gap.
The empirical material was collected during three years in sex secondary school classes through filmed sessions of groups or pairs working with their project.
Each of the four articles primarily focuses a special dilemma; structure, independence, instructions and critical thinking. By combining Goffman’s frame analysis with the concepts of risk and uncertainty from a Risk – society perspective, issues related to what it means to do project work as independent, critical 21st-century learner are illustrated and discussed.
The choice to look only at situations in which students have to manage without the aid of a physically present teacher illuminates several practical consequences like an unwillingness to go to the teacher and ask questions and an increased concentration on and interpretation of the written instructions. A development of Miller and Parlett’s (1974) discussion of student approach to cues are suggested. The concept of the cue choosing student are constructed in order to better respond to demands from an individualised interaction society. The study also emphasises how the students have to balance different frameworks in order to be both authors and assessed students. By implementing a risk society perspective new ways of analysing and understanding independence and classroom interaction is suggested and a recontextualization of critical thinking proposed.
Parts of work
1. Nilsson, L.-E., Eklöf, A., & Ottosson, T. (2008). Unstructured information as a socio-technical dilemma. In Hansson, T. (Ed.), Handbook of research on digital information technologies: Innovations, methods and ethical issues (pp. 482–506). Her¬shey, PA: Information Science Reference. Doi:10.4018/978-1-59904-970-0.ch031
2. Eklöf, A., Nilsson, L.-E., & Svensson, P. (2009). So I sat down with my mother: Connectedness orientation and pupils’ independence. In Tatnall, A. & Jones, A. (Eds.), Education and technology for a better world, proceedings 9th IFIP TC 3 World conference. Bento Goncalves, Brasil Springer. Doi:10.1007/978-3-642-03115-1_30
3. Eklöf, A., Nilsson, L.-E., & Ottosson, T. (2013). Instructions, independence, and uncertainty: Student framing in self-regulated project work. Accepted for publication in European Educational Research Journal.
4. Eklöf, A. (2013). A long and winding path: Requirements for critical thinking in project work. Learning, Culture and Social Interaction, 2(2), 61–74. Doi: 10.1016/j.lcsi.2012.11.001
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Education, Communication and Learning ; Institutionen för pedagogik, kommunikation och lärande
Disputation
Fredagen den 13 juni 2014, klockan 13.00, Aulan (7-318),Högskolan Kristianstad
Date of defence
2014-06-13
anders.eklof@hkr.se
Date
2014-05-22Author
Eklöf, Anders
Keywords
project work
independence
individualisation
critical thinking
frame analysis
risk
uncertainty
Risk-society
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7346-793-3 (tryckt)
978-91-7346-794-0 (pdf)
ISSN
0436-1121
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Educational Sciences
353
Language
eng