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      Teaching about volcanoes: Practices, perceptions, and implications for professional development

      Jolley, Alison; Dohaney, Jacqueline; Kennedy, Ben M.
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      Jolley_et_al-2022-Volcanica.pdf
      Published version, 955.2Kb
      DOI
       10.30909/vol.05.01.1132
      Link
       doi.org
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      Permanent link to Research Commons version
      https://hdl.handle.net/10289/14737
      Abstract
      Volcanology education is important for the development of geoscientists and scientifically literate citizens. We surveyed 55 volcanology instructors to determine their learning and teaching practices, perceptions of academic development, and educational support needs. Instructors reported using a wide range of practices and tools, but lectures, field experiences, maps, rock samples, academic literature, and inherited teaching materials are the most common. Instructors valued educational support from others (e.g., talking with colleagues and students, consulting with learning and teaching specialists) over conducting their own investigations. However, they did not report engaging in as many of these activities as they valued. Instructors requested more support in resource sharing and collation, conference workshops, and co-creation of resources and educational research. We suggest that instructors and academic development staff work together to share and build knowledge in the learning and teaching of volcanology in higher education, and to improve student learning outcomes.
      Date
      2022
      Type
      Journal Article
      Publisher
      Presses universitaires de Strasbourg
      Rights
      This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
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      • General Papers [48]
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