teacher's communicative style in sustainable education
DESCRIPTION
Presentation at NERA 42nd Conference Education for sustainable development, Lillehammer, Norway. http://nera2014.org/TRANSCRIPT
www.laurea.fi
Teacher's communicative style in sustainable
educationTeemu YlikoskiSusanna Niinistö-Sivuranta
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1. Interpersonal competence
Justificationssustainability experts are change agents, working in interdisciplinary teams, influencing attitudes and knowledge: communication is criticalLaurea’s pedagogical approach emphasizes working life skills. The ability to communicate, act and influence in a working life environment is pivotal.
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Developing interpersonal competence
Interpersonal competence arises from learning by doing.It requires facilitation, guidance, and co-creation. The role of the teacher is critical in creating a communication environment that fosters the development of communicative skills. For some educators, there is a substantial shift involved.
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Teacher competences
The traditional discourse of teaching emphasizes proficiency, expertise, and communication power. Knowledge, logic and argumentation are the building blocks of this traditional discourse. However, it falls short from the point of view of interpersonal competence development.In the new culture of learning the educational discourse of expertise transforms into a discourse of tutoring and joint learning.
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A paradox?
What initially interested us is the paradox of ”good teaching”If the teacher’s job is to ensure students’ professional growth as interactive communicators, is this goal best acheived througha. The traditional discourse of an expert teacher,
powerful lecturer, and skilled speakerb. Or the new discourse of the teacher-coach, who
stands back when needed, letting students fill the communication space
In short, what is the example we show our students in terms of communication style?
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2. Analysis
We have analyzed actual student feedback data from a Finnish university of applied sciences. Using qualitative coding, we looked for themes relating to teacher communicative styles; themes pertaining to the teacher’s attitudes of lecture vs. interaction
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3. Results
The results revealed something we didn’t anticipate, but which makes perfect sense nonetheless: the discourse of lecture vs. interaction is more complex.There are two groups of student discourse relating to interaction vs. fact-based lecturing
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Early phases of learning
Students in the early phases of their studies tend to emphasize ”correct data”, ”straight facts”, and the grades they receive. This seems to border the discussion on external motivators in learning. Students have still to see the purpose of their studies.The ”good teacher” in this discourse is a person who is clear in assignments, delivers facts straight and ”true”, and leaves preferably no space for interpretation.
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Later phases of learning
Students with a longer history in studying start to emphasize different issues in their discourse. This is where the talk of interaction, participation and co-creation starts to arise.Students seem to approach the intrinsic motivators in learning, where learning itself becomes important, not the attached grades.In this discourse, the ”good teacher” is one asking questions and encouraging discussions.
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A path of professional growth
interaction
learning
grades
facts
motivators
content
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4. Conclusions
The path of professional growth towards interpersonal competence starts from fact-based learning and progresses towards interaction
The role of the teacher is complex; it is not only about supporting communicative skills and coaching interaction, it is also a question of guiding the student through the process of socializationIt seems the teacher needs to ”grow” on a path parallel to the student’s path.Interpersonal competence needs to be coaxed carefully, building on small steps first and then speeding up later.
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Conclusions
Students’ professional growth consists of several simultaneous paths:
Students need to become socialized in the university, learning how to actThey need to learn to manage their time and the demands of schoolThey need to build their own expertise They need to learn how to interact and present their skills, capabilities and knowledge
While these can happen in parallel, there is also a sequence involved. The teacher needs to adapt into the needs of the student in the student’s present stage in the growth process