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Action research: a methodology for transformative learning for a professor and his students in an engineering classroom
Authors:Jillian Seniuk Cicek  Sandra Ingram  Marcia Friesen  Douglas Ruth
Institution:1. Faculty of Engineering, Centre for Engineering Professional Practice and Engineering Education, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canadaumseniuk@myumanitoba.ca;3. Faculty of Engineering, Centre for Engineering Professional Practice and Engineering Education, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada
Abstract:ABSTRACT

An engineering professor of a first-year thermodynamics course and a PhD student with a focus in engineering education in a large research university in Canada participated in an ethnographic action research study with the intention of increasing active learning in the classroom to enhance student engagement and learning. Unexpected findings included transformative changes to the professor’s epistemology of teaching and learning. Through the action research cycle of planning, implementing, observing, and critically reflecting, modifications were made to the instructional strategies and the learning environment that created a micro engineering community of practice where both students and teaching assistants engaged in deep learning and legitimate peripheral participation on the trajectory to ‘becoming engineers’. Qualitative interview data from the professor, three students, and three teaching assistants are analysed through approaches to learning research and situated learning theory. Engaging in action research had profound repercussions in this case. The authors make the argument for action research as a catalyst for transformative learning required for teachers to engage students in the twenty-first century classroom.
Keywords:Transformative learning  community of practice  engineering education  action research  situated cognition theory
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