Title: Phenomenology in Education
1Phenomenology in Education
- Professor Peter Ashworth
- Sheffield Hallam University
2Outline (1)
- What phenomenology is
- How to clarify experience
- Some key notions
- The idea of the lifeworld
- Bracketing reality!
- Description (elucidation) not interpretation or
explanation - Some essential features of experience
- Personal or general?
- Essence
3Outline (2)
- Example of phenomenological work as critique of a
strong tradition in HE research Approaches to
Study. - Generating and elucidating personal experience
Describe a situation in which you felt yourself
to be a teacher.
4What phenomenology is
- Absolute focus is on my experience of It is
the detailed description of experience what
appears in its appearing - But all sorts of forms of empirical research
would seem to be about experience - Self-report questionnaires and inventories of all
kinds - Narrative work in social science and history
- Interview-based studies
5Phenomenological approach elucidating
taken-for-granteds
- Elucidating experience to describe what
everyone knows may seem a pretty empty
ambition! But - People dont know. We act according to
understandings which are for the most part
pre-reflective. Elucidating them can be a
revelation. - Everyone may have taken-for-granteds which
enable a roughly-shared communal life to take
place but there is scope for a great deal of
idiosyncrasy.
6Phenomenology How to clarify experience
7How to clarify experience Time
- Experience entails time. But what does this mean?
- The ribbon of time and the scientific view of the
past as leading to the present by causation - Consciousness of time is, rather, from now to the
past as memory and from now to the future as
anticipation both related to imagination. - Past and future are always presentist
8Lived time, temporality
- If the past and future are to be understood
through the present, it is also true that the
present implicitly recollects and anticipates - Each present reasserts the presence of the
whole past which it supplants, and anticipates
that of all that is to come, and by definition
the present is not shut up within itself, but
transcends itself towards a future and a past. - (Merleau-Ponty, 1962/1945, p 420)
9How to clarify experience Space
- Just as time might be objectively represented
by the ribbon and arrow of clock time, space has
its various scientific representations. The three
dimensionality of technical operation on space is
an example. - Subjectively, space extends from me. And it has
social meanings of access and restriction, and
psychological meanings of closeness and distance.
10Lived space spatiality
- Space can be hugely anomalous in the way it is
lived. Maybe one does not know something which is
perceived every day. - In a pathological instance, Merleau-Ponty
comments on spatiality in which the nose can be
grasped but not pointed to we have to create
the concepts necessary to convey the fact that
bodily space may be given to me in an intention
to take hold without being given as an intention
to know. (1945 /1962, p. 104)
11Some questions that can be put to the experience
of temporality and spatiality
- When and where am I a teacher?
- When and where is she a student?
- When and where is the university?
- When and where is economic theory pertinent?
12How to clarify experience Self
- Self as the subject of experience experience is
mine. Anonymous basic presence as self. - My identity in relation to others who am I in
this situation? Roles and positionings - Selfhood as presence, voice, agency in a
situation.
13How to clarify experience Embodiment
- How does the situation relate to feelings about
ones own body, including gender, disabilities
and emotions? - Vulnerabilities and physical strength.
- Since it is through the body that we are able to
pursue our projects, illness may well be most
felt by the way it thwarts our projects. - Variation in the sense of bodily presence in a
situation.
14How to clarify experience Other people
- Who are the other people in a certain situation?
(There may be levels of implication or
experienced reality.) - How does the situation affect relations with
others? There is no doubt of the intrinsic
relatedness of self and other, so who am I in
relation to these others?
15Lived experience of others
- In describing experience of others, we must
refrain from objective judgements. Terms such
as paranoia are suspect. - So an other whatever they are really like on
some criterion or other must be described e.g.
wonderful or devilish if this is their
appearing to experience.
16How to clarify experience discourses
- What sort of terms educational, social,
commercial, ethical etc are employed to
describe and thence to live the situation? It
has been considered by many that discourse
supplants phenomenological description. But this
is not so, even if speech is a powerful factor in
the lifeworld.
17Discourse and experience
- Speech is that paradoxical operation through
which, by using words of a given sense and
already available meanings, we try to follow up
an intention which necessarily outstrips,
modifies and itself, in the last analysis,
stabilizes the meanings of the words which
translate it. (Merleau-Ponty, 1962/1945, p 389)
18How to clarify experience Project(s)
- How does the situation relate to the persons
ability to carry out the activities they are
committed to and which they regard as central to
their life? (The emotions of regret and pride,
among others may relate to pursuing projects.)
All the things and events of the lifeworld may be
related to the notion of project.
19Project
- The thing is inseparable from the person
perceiving it, and can never be actually in
itself because its articulations are those of our
very existence, and because it stands at the
other end of our gaze or at the terminus of a
sensory exploration which invests it with
humanity. (Merleau-Ponty, 1962/1945, p 320)
20How to clarify experience The moodedness of the
situation
- Not having a mood. This and similar locutions
involve presuppositions about interiority, or
cause which must be set aside. - Moodedness of the situation reminds us of
feeling-tone as an essential element of any
situation for us.
21The Lifeworld as central in the clarification of
experience
- It is possible to say that selfhood, others,
embodiment, temporality, spatiality, discourse,
project and mood are part of the essence of the
lifeworld. - Each situation displays a certain variation on
each of the essential features.
22Other central notions of phenomenology
- Bracketing reality!
- Description not interpretation or explanation
- Some essential features of experience
- Personal or general?
- Essence
- An intrinsic relatedness of the researcher to
the research participant (noema and noesis
developed)
23Bracketing reality!
- Bracketing reality, the epoche, is enormously
contentious. - But really it is the core of phenomenology. The
move to the focus on experience as such. - Set aside whether a thought or perception is
real, etc. The thing to be elucidated is the
phenomenon in its appearing.
24Description not interpretation or explanation
- The thing to be elucidated is the experience.
- The experiencers experience not the
researchers interpretation - The experience, not its explanation in terms of
some cause or other.
25Some essential features of experience
Intentionality
- All consciousness is of Intentionality
- There are two elements here (a) the mode of
consciousness e.g. perceiving, judging and (b)
the thing it is consciousness of the percept,
the judgement - Both of these are within awareness (remember,
we have bracketed reality)
26Some essential features of experience Horizons
- A certain thing that one is conscious of, gets
its meaning from a whole network of connections
of understanding. - This is part of the way in which discourse has
its effect.
27Personal or general?
- It is right to assume as a part of research
method that each individuals experience is quite
unique. - Then, when a general tendency or a set of common
themes emerges from the data, the finding that
there is a shared meaning carries enormous
conviction.
28Essence
- It could be that a particular meaning of a
situation really is specific to a particular
person. Or there could be a set of meanings and
groups of people relate to different members of
that set. - But it could be that a phenomenon has certain
essential features. Might even be universal. - The idea of essence is a different kind of
generalisation to (e.g.) empirical
generalisabilty from a sample to a population.
29Intrinsic relatedness of researcher to
participant
- Phenomenology is not interested in the detached
objectivity of experimental research, nor in
the reflexivity of some qualitative research. - Since the researcher has the same kind of
structure of awareness as everyone else, they
have a certain noesis (they attend to X in a
certain investigative way) and the object of
investigation the noema has a large horizon
of meaning-associations. - In understanding and describing my or anothers
experience it is right and inevitable that my
subjectivity comes into play. - Validation is agreement that the description is
elucidatory.
30Example of phenomenological work as critique of a
strong tradition in HE research Approaches to
Study.
31Existing research methodologies
- Göteborg qualitative research phenomenography
Marton, Säljö, Svensson - Quantitative, psychometric research Entwistle,
Ramsden, Biggs
32Phenomenographic research Student constructions
of learning
- Learning in the learner's perspective (Säljö,
1979) - Interviews with students "What do you actually
mean by learning?"
33Approaches to Study
- The major division of the outcome space of the
approaches to study phenomenography is between - Deep Approaches, which stress meaning and
understanding and tend to treat the material
holistically, and - Surface Approaches, which stress memorisation and
reproduction, and tend to treat the material
fragmentarily.
34A psychometric adaptation
- The 'deep and surface approaches to learning'
tradition was further developed through
Entwistle's Approaches to Study Inventory. - The Entwistle questionnaire is a change in
methodology. - Rather than a qualitative discovery methodology,
as in phenomenography, we have a questionnaire
measure of deep and surface learning as
established quantitative variables.
35Subscales of ASI (2000) Deep Approach
- Seeking Meaning
- Relating Ideas
- Use of Evidence
- Interest in Ideas
36Subscales of ASI (2000) Surface Approach
- Lack of Purpose
- Unrelated Memorising
- Syllabus-Boundedness
- Fear of Failure
37ASI structure phenomenographic outcome space
- Both Marton and Entwistle refer to the relation
between the learner and the material to be
learned. They both refer to intentionality - But in fact, ASI and phenomenography are similar
in treating approaches to learning as essentially
mental orientations, and neglecting the
importance of the thing (the learning situation)
which the mental orientation is directed towards.
38The meaning of intentionality
- All consciousness is of something (the
intentionality axiom of phenomenology).
39Noema and Noesis elements of intentionality
- Noesis is the mental orientation to the
phenomenon (e.g. superficial approach to
learning) - Noema is the object of awareness (e.g. a text to
be learned in limited time under various
pressures) - Both are aspects of intentionality
- The noema is bound up with the lifeworld
40Revisiting the qualitative description of
approaches to learning
- We set aside the assumptions built into the
Gothenburg group's work that an approach to
learning will emerge as a mental orientation
and start again with in-depth interviews of
students concerning their conceptions of study.
41Methodology
- Qualitative research interviewing about the
experience of the learning situation, what is to
be learned, the student (as a learner), and the
context. Not just mental orientation to the task
of studying. - Set aside (bracket) the question of the
objective reality of what is said, the focus is
on subjectivity.
42The area of investigation The lifeworld
- The self
- Identity (is being a student central?)
- agency, presence and voice (and the felt lack of
these in a situation e.g. a learning
situation). - Embodiment - the lived body, including
motivations and emotions associated with
embodiment.
43The area of investigation The lifeworld
- Other people
- The meaning of others relates to self or
identity, and to project. - Consider the impact of fellow students
- Significant others
- Role models
- Lecturers
44The area of investigation The lifeworld
- Subjective Time (temporality) including
biography the sense of the time-sequence of
events the emotions of impatience, longing, etc. - Subjective Space (spatiality) including the
spatial arrangement of social life regions where
one can or cant politely access distances and
the associated metaphors.
45The area of investigation The lifeworld
- Project (Sartre) or Care (Heidegger)
- A person has certain priorities and lines of
interest which (though no doubt open to free
change) remain almost definitive of them. What is
the relevance of being a student in general to
this? What is the meaning of learning this
material to the learners project?
46The area of investigation The lifeworld
- Discourse
- The events, people and objects of the
lifeworld are already subject to discourse we
live in an interpreted world. There are things
that one says about being a student and about
the learning situation - (The difference between phenomenology and
discourse analysis is that in the former
discourses refer to experience.)
47The area of investigation The lifeworld
- Moodedness of the situation
- What is the feeling-tone of learning situations?
48Student A Gary
- The learning situation is one which holds out the
possibility of affirmation for Gary. - Collaborative learning situations may provide
affirmation he notices ploys which might lead to
favourable comparison with others. (As
interpersonal tactics, he teaches others and / or
gains higher grades.) - A hazard in learning is the necessity of the
text. Dyslexia renders text an enemy, and a
consumer of valuable time.
49Student B Clive
- Learning is a competition. He can win esteem by
winning he knows men do take this line. - The meaning of learning is bound up with parental
expectations he knows he must succeed in their
eyes. (Their disapproval has led to his
abandonment of his own preferences in the past.) - To be a successful competitor Clive knows he must
look for cues from his teachers about what is
expected. Then he will be able to achieve high
grades and therefore beat his peers in the
academic game.
50Student C Diane
- Learning is about achieving personal meaning.
- There is a movement of seizing material and
internalising it (almost physically), followed by
a process of doing with it. - Others are (privately) engaged in the same thing.
- She happily accepts that the course restricts the
scope of this meaning-making.
51Student D Karen
- Learning is reaching a shared understanding with
others. - Her place (literally) in the academic environment
is assured in the exchange of bodily signs of
shared understanding. - She must always be aware of others needs and
wants. - Learning collaboratively is exciting.
- At times the demands of others leads Karen to
find alternative places to learn on her own.
52Is an approach to studying noetic or is it
noematic ?
- It is plain from the descriptions of studying
within the lifeworld that much more of the
meaning of studying for the student comes from
the place of the activity within the flow of
their life rather than the mental orientation
which (maybe as a response to the contingencies
of the lifeworld) has been adopted.
53Conclusion
- Approaches to studying are much richer than can
be encapsulated by noetic descriptions of depth
or superficiality, even when elaborated as in
later versions of the ASI. The conception of
learning as deep or surface (etc.) has no
helpful meaning in understanding the activity of
university students.
54.
- We need to recover awareness of the individuality
of the student. Both in research and in pedagogy.
- This individuality is best viewed in terms of
their subjective lifeworld rather than mental
orientation. - Classifying students using an instrument that is
confined to the noetic is of limited usefulness
at best.
55Generating and elucidating personal experience
Describe a situation in which you felt yourself
to be a teacher.
56Generating and elucidating personal experience
different formulations of the topic
- Describe a situation in which you felt yourself
to be a teacher. - Describe a situation in which you were
disappointed as a teacher (in a teaching relevant
context). - Describe a situation in which you felt learning
had occurred.
57Producing the protocol
- Individually write a one-side of A4 account of a
situation which you feel relates to the topic. - Your partner may inquire further, having read the
account, bearing in mind the phenomenology of the
lifeworld.
58The reflective production of meaning-units
- Exchange protocols and consider
sentence-by-sentence the meaning of what has been
written. - Always in the light of the question of the
meaning of teaching.
59The construction of an account of the experience
- Themes?
- Essences?
- Features of the lifeworld?