Conceptualising an epistemically diverse curriculum for a course for academic developers

  • Quinn L
  • Vorster J
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Abstract

In this conceptual article we use Luckett's model for an epistemically diverse curriculum, Kitchener's levels of cognition and Maton's concepts of knowledge and knowers to analyse a curriculum of a postgraduate diploma in higher education specifically for academic developers. We describe three meta-level frameworks which we offer to our participants to make explicit the pedagogy of the course. Our main argument is that a course which prepares participants to practise in the complex contemporary higher education context requires them to engage with specific kinds of knowledge, ways of thinking and ways of being so that they can contribute towards addressing the numerous and vexing teaching and learning challenges in their institutional contexts. We argue that analyses such as these help to make explicit the organising principles of a curriculum to the curriculum designers themselves who are then able to use the insights to strengthen the design, pedagogy and assessment of their courses.

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Quinn, L., & Vorster, J. (2016). Conceptualising an epistemically diverse curriculum for a course for academic developers. South African Journal of Higher Education, 30(6). https://doi.org/10.20853/30-6-717

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