The role of engagement in inspiring teaching and learning
Top Cited Papers
- 9 October 2007
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Innovations in Education and Teaching International
- Vol. 44 (4) , 349-362
- https://doi.org/10.1080/14703290701602748
Abstract
The aim of the paper is to integrate notions of the improvement of student learning through a focus on the concept of engagement, and adds to that broader discussion through a recent empirical study of the perceptions of students gathered through a case study in a UK university. It is proposed that student engagement lies on a continuum from disengaged to engaged, and also exists at a number of levels within which the same student may exhibit different degrees of engagement. We argue that if the built‐in alienating influences within higher education are to be countered, multi‐faceted engagement is required. Learners, we conclude, are more likely to engage if they in turn are supported by teaching staff who engage with: students, with the subject, and with the teaching process, and furthermore that the classroom teacher requires support in achieving this.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Alienation in the learning environment: a failure of community?Studies in Higher Education, 2005
- Meaning, identity and ‘motivation’: expanding what matters in understanding learning in higher education?Studies in Higher Education, 2004
- What about the workers? The expansion of higher education and the transformation of academic workIndustrial Relations Journal, 2004
- Cultivating a sense of belonging in part-time studentsInternational Journal of Lifelong Education, 2001
- Alternative Perspectives on the Student Experience: Alienation and engagementStudies in Higher Education, 2001
- Reconsidering the dimensions of approaches to learningBritish Journal of Educational Psychology, 1999
- Deep and surface learning: a simple or simplistic dichotomy?Accounting Education, 1997
- Managing the Academics: Commodification and Control in the Development of University Education in the U.K.Human Relations, 1995
- Conceptions of teaching and their relationship to student learningBritish Journal of Educational Psychology, 1993
- ON QUALITATIVE DIFFERENCES IN LEARNING: I—OUTCOME AND PROCESS*British Journal of Educational Psychology, 1976