Pedagogy for a Wicked World: The Value and Hazards of a Transdisciplinary, Dialogue-Driven, Community Engagged Classroom Model
Author(s)
Lake, Danielle LKeywords
wicked problemspedagogy
community engagement
soft systems thinking
pragmatism
Pedagogy
Curriculum and Instruction
Ethics and Political Philosophy
Feminist Philosophy
Liberal Studies
Scholarship of Teaching and Learning
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http://works.bepress.com/danielle_lake/18http://modeling.outreach.msu.edu/upload/2015/14_Lake_Pedagogy.pdf
Abstract
This presentation provides a number of strategies for instructors interested in a more participatory, transdisciplinary, and experiential educational model in order to foster real-world change around our high-stakes, complex public problems. By utilizing soft system’s thinking in addition to a feminist pragmatist methodology students can successfully collaborate with community partners and integrate across their disciplinary expertise in order to co-develop and implement action-plans with community stakeholders. Given the value of this work, but also the challenges, this session also highlights the potential pitfalls of working to prepare students for a messy, iterative process of collaboratively learning-by-doing in a “wicked” world.Date
2015-04-01Type
textIdentifier
oai:works.bepress.com:danielle_lake-1031http://works.bepress.com/danielle_lake/18
http://modeling.outreach.msu.edu/upload/2015/14_Lake_Pedagogy.pdf