1995
DOI: 10.1002/tl.37219956404
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Disciplinary differences in knowledge validation

Abstract: Validation processes and truth criteria employed in a discipline define the discipline, govern knowledge production and dissemination in the discipline, and suggest ways of improving instruction.

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Cited by 48 publications
(29 citation statements)
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“…Using such criteria, we could not differentiate among the hard and soft MOOCs, as they would differ only minimally. Instead, informed by our conceptual framework, we interpreted structured-ness as the degree to which the original course content reflected the characteristics of disciplinary knowledge (Donald, 1995) and yielded itself to tangential discussion and opportunistic expansion. Building on the learning outcomes of their MOOCs, instructors in this study constructed their course content in accordance with disciplinary expectations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Using such criteria, we could not differentiate among the hard and soft MOOCs, as they would differ only minimally. Instead, informed by our conceptual framework, we interpreted structured-ness as the degree to which the original course content reflected the characteristics of disciplinary knowledge (Donald, 1995) and yielded itself to tangential discussion and opportunistic expansion. Building on the learning outcomes of their MOOCs, instructors in this study constructed their course content in accordance with disciplinary expectations.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But as approaches to teaching have become more diverse, it seems the language underpinning and sustaining them has struggled to maintain its shared communal meaning. Furthermore, normative beliefs about teaching methods vary across disciplines (Donald, 1995;Murray & Renaud, 1995). Terms from the lexicon may be invoked without an understanding of their relationship to traditional educational philosophies and the connections with and among other terms in that lexicon.…”
Section: Shared Educational Philosophiesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…These have included, for example, geography (Johnston, 1996), health (Pirrie, 1999), management (Tranfield, 2002), psychology (Donald, 1995;Bath and Smith, 2004), sociology (Ylijoki, 2000), tourism studies (Tribe, 1997(Tribe, , 2010 and women's studies (Stanley, 1997;Bird, 2001). …”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…• academic cultures, sub-cultures and identities (Välimaa, 1998;Ylijoki, 2000;Silver, 2003;Hyland, 2012) • academic development (Bath and Smith, 2004;Blackmore, 2007) • doctoral education (Parry, 2007) • higher education research (Tight, 2008) • interdisciplinarity (Bird, 2001) • internationalisation (Clifford, 2009) • knowledge validation (Donald, 1995) • leadership and management (Kekäle, 1999) • quality (Kekäle, 2002) • research (Brew, 2008) • teacher education (Menter, 2011;Murray and Kosnik, 2011) • teaching and learning (Smeby, 1996;Neumann, 2001;Neumann et al, 2002;Entwistle, 2005;Lindblom-Ylanne et al, 2006) These are all, of course, issues that impact -directly or indirectly -on policymakers in higher education, at departmental, institutional, national and international levels.…”
mentioning
confidence: 99%
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