“…The importance of focusing on political science students' understandings of knowledge and knowledge production is due to lack of research in this area, and thus, how students experience conflicting epistemologies, what challenges this poses, and, how it potentially affects learning, is important. When epistemological issues have been discussed, it has generally been done in relation to fear of a biased education that, for example, only allows certain perspectives to serve as "truths" (Dey 1996;Horowitz 2007;LaFalce and Gomez 2007;Peters and Droddy 2003) or that education is not able to cultivate the right kind of knowledge, a political knowledge that may shape the political values and standpoints of the students in a preferable way (Hildreth 2006;Kelly-Woessner and Woessner 2008;Latimer and Hempsen 2012;Martin, Tankersley and Ye 2012). We wish to add to this literature a broader focus on students' understanding of knowledge and knowledge production in the discipline and to explore if they see the nature of knowledge in the discipline as something problematic and if so, how they deal with these problems.…”