Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
1099308 | Library & Information Science Research | 2013 | 7 Pages |
•Three student experiences of an informed learning lesson are revealed.•Critical features focused on in each experience are identified.•Experience of information use and subject content are identified for each.•Simultaneous focus on information use and subject content are identified for one.
Informed learning is a pedagogy that focuses on learning subject content through engaging with academic or professional information practices. Adopting the position that more powerful learning is achieved where students are taught how to use information and subject content simultaneously, the research reported here investigated an informed learning lesson. Using phenomenographic methods, students' experiences of the lesson were compared with observations of how the lesson was enacted in the classroom. Based on an analysis of student interviews using variation theory, different ways of experiencing the informed learning lesson emerged. Some students understood the lesson to be about learning to use information, i.e., researching and writing an academic paper, while others understood it as focusing on understanding both subject content and information use simultaneously. Although the results of this study are highly contextualized, the findings suggest criteria to consider when designing informed learning lessons.