Article

Theorising simulation in higher education: difficulty for learners as an emergent phenomenon

Details

Citation

Abrandt Dahlgren M, Fenwick T & Hopwood N (2016) Theorising simulation in higher education: difficulty for learners as an emergent phenomenon. Teaching in Higher Education, 21 (6), pp. 613-627. https://doi.org/10.1080/13562517.2016.1183620

Abstract
Despite the widespread interest in using and researching simulation in higher education, little discussion has yet to address a key pedagogical concern: difficulty. A ‘sociomaterial’ view of learning, explained in this paper, goes beyond cognitive considerations to highlight dimensions of material, situational, representational and relational difficulty confronted by students in experiential learning activities such as simulation. In this paper we explore these dimensions of difficulty through three contrasting scenarios of simulation education. The scenarios are drawn from studies conducted in three international contexts: Australia, Sweden and the UK, which illustrate diverse approaches to simulation and associated differences in the forms of difficulty being produced. For educators using simulation, the key implications are the importance of noting and understanding (1) the effects on students of interaction among multiple forms of difficulty; (2) the emergent and unpredictable nature of difficulty; and (3) the need to teach students strategies for managing emergent difficulty.

Keywords
Simulation; professional learning; sociomaterial theory; difficulty; emergence

Journal
Teaching in Higher Education: Volume 21, Issue 6

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2016
Publication date online11/05/2016
Date accepted by journal18/01/2016
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/23305
PublisherTaylor and Francis
ISSN1356-2517
eISSN1470-1294

People (1)

Professor Tara Fenwick

Professor Tara Fenwick

Emeritus Professor, Education

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