Teacher-learners' conceptions of learning: evidence of a "communalist" conception amongst postgraduate learners
Journal Article
1998
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Higher Education
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Springer
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University of Cape Town
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Abstract
Recently, research on mature students' approaches to learning, conducted within a students'-experiences-of-learning framework, has suggested that these students tend towards being deep-level learners. The studies reported in this paper were focused on the self-reported conceptions of learning of a group of mature students enrolled in a postgraduate degree course. A primary aim of these studies was to assess the extent to which these students reported "sophisticated" conceptions of learning, as might be expected from mature, postgraduate learners. A secondary focus was to assess the extent to which academic context might be said to have influenced learning conceptions over time. The studies suggest that, for this sample of students, quantitative conceptions appear to predominate. In addition, a conception of learning that does not appear to "fit" within the conceptual model used to assess these conceptions is presented and discussed. Empirical data suggesting the stability of these learning conceptions over time is discussed in the light of its implications for teaching on postgraduate degree programmes where students appear to hold quantitative conceptions of learning. But the paper also argues for the need for further research into a conception which holds that learning is a moral obligation or service to a community.
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The final publication is available at Springer via http://dx.doi.org/10.1023/A:1003021132510.
Reference:
Cliff, A. 1998. Teacher-learners' conceptions of learning: evidence of a "communalist" conception amongst postgraduate learners. Higher Education .