The use of simulation is becoming increasingly important in the education of practitioners whose field of work contains a low tolerance for error. In aerospace, aviation, medicine, paramedicine, and the military, simulations are expected to provide working practitioners with on demand experience. However, the ways in which learning emerges out of simulation have been poorly understood. This research provides insight into the processes of learning that are generated and the forms of knowledge that arise out of learning endeavors based upon the use of simulation.
This study employed a form of naturalistic inquiry. Eight individuals from seven domains of work were extensively interviewed regarding their simulation experience. Conceptually, the methods are premised upon Pattons (2002) understanding of qualitative inquiry, Van Manens (1997) phenomenological approach to lived experience, and Ricoeurs hermeneutical approach to the interpretation of the text. Ricoeurs (1986) conceptualization of ideology and utopia as a dialectic which comprises the social imaginary and Kearneys (2003) analysis of the Other inform the analysis.
It is the central finding of this study that experience in simulation is consistently interpreted to be both real and an imagination of the real. Experiential learning has at least five dimensions: purpose, interpretation, engagement, self, and context (Fenwick, 2003) all of which are affected in the pedagogical activity of simulation. The learning that emerges out of simulation always involves the social imaginary. Simulation forces an engagement with the symbolic nature of the social imaginary, and it is because a specific aspect of the social imaginary is reproduced in simulation that a need for interpretation is provoked and learning occurs.
This study is theoretically significant because it adds to the academic literature through an improved understanding of simulation as a complex entanglement of the real and the imaginary. Practical significance lies in understanding the effective use of simulation as a pedagogical tool which can inform or reify the existing dimensions of experiential learning. Overall, the study contributes to our knowledge about how learning emerges out of simulation and how simulation fosters such an emergence. / Adult Education
Identifer | oai:union.ndltd.org:LACETR/oai:collectionscanada.gc.ca:AEU.10048/1302 |
Date | 11 1900 |
Creators | Essington, Timothy Don |
Contributors | Chovanec, Donna (Educational Policy Studies), Abdi, Ali (Educational Policy Studies), Taylor, Alison (Educational Policy Studies), Buck, George (Educational Psychology), King, Sharla (Educational Psychology), Fenwick, Tara (Stirling Institute of Education, University of Stirling), English, Leona (St. Francis Xavier University) |
Source Sets | Library and Archives Canada ETDs Repository / Centre d'archives des thèses électroniques de Bibliothèque et Archives Canada |
Language | English |
Detected Language | English |
Type | Thesis |
Format | 1512673 bytes, application/pdf |
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