Scholars of teaching and learning around the world and in many disciplines have been using the Decoding the Disciplines process to make explicit the mental operations that students must master to succeed. Teachers, as experts in their disciplines, often hold this knowledge in tacit and implicit ways that are not easily accessible to novices, resulting in "bottlenecks" to learning. A key step towards addressing bottlenecks is a Decoding interview in which teachers uncover and unpack crucial thinking with the help of two interviewers outside their field. The interview can yield important insights for teachers, generate data for SoTL work, and also play an important role in developing the community and trust necessary for collaborative teachin...
A large proportion of social science investigations rely on interview data, yet few researchers rece...
The author interviewed Dr. Paul Seedhouse (Newcastle University, United Kingdom) about Video Enhance...
This workshop builds on the notion that however skilled a scholar might be in her subject, the teach...
Scholars of teaching and learning around the world and in many disciplines have been using the Decod...
This chapter presents the bottlenecks identified by seven faculty members from diverse disciplines, ...
In this chapter we describe the “Decoding the Disciplines” Faculty Learning Community at Mount Royal...
Slides by Miller-Young and Yeo, as part of a panel presentation chaired by David PaceDavid Pace1, Ja...
This final chapter synthesizes the findings and implications derived from applying the Decoding the ...
Abstract Interviewing is often thought of as a research tool, but by shifting focus, teachers can us...
This chapter argues that expert practice is an inquiry which surfaces a hermeneutic relationship bet...
This paper makes a conceptual argument for using the Decoding the Disciplines research paradigm as a...
This chapter describes a multidisciplinary faculty self-study about reciprocity in service-learning....
This chapter demonstrates how Decoding work can be productively utilized within a curriculum change ...
Abstract. The teaching/learning interview has been used to investigate student learning. The aim of ...
Our research hypothesis expects that there are principles of dialogic teaching on teachers' bes...
A large proportion of social science investigations rely on interview data, yet few researchers rece...
The author interviewed Dr. Paul Seedhouse (Newcastle University, United Kingdom) about Video Enhance...
This workshop builds on the notion that however skilled a scholar might be in her subject, the teach...
Scholars of teaching and learning around the world and in many disciplines have been using the Decod...
This chapter presents the bottlenecks identified by seven faculty members from diverse disciplines, ...
In this chapter we describe the “Decoding the Disciplines” Faculty Learning Community at Mount Royal...
Slides by Miller-Young and Yeo, as part of a panel presentation chaired by David PaceDavid Pace1, Ja...
This final chapter synthesizes the findings and implications derived from applying the Decoding the ...
Abstract Interviewing is often thought of as a research tool, but by shifting focus, teachers can us...
This chapter argues that expert practice is an inquiry which surfaces a hermeneutic relationship bet...
This paper makes a conceptual argument for using the Decoding the Disciplines research paradigm as a...
This chapter describes a multidisciplinary faculty self-study about reciprocity in service-learning....
This chapter demonstrates how Decoding work can be productively utilized within a curriculum change ...
Abstract. The teaching/learning interview has been used to investigate student learning. The aim of ...
Our research hypothesis expects that there are principles of dialogic teaching on teachers' bes...
A large proportion of social science investigations rely on interview data, yet few researchers rece...
The author interviewed Dr. Paul Seedhouse (Newcastle University, United Kingdom) about Video Enhance...
This workshop builds on the notion that however skilled a scholar might be in her subject, the teach...