I shall use this editorial to express my mixed feelings about the COVID-19 pandemic that affected our lives strongly, personally and professionally, in very different ways for over two years. Going back to our schools, colleges and universities, without even wearing facemasks, sometimes feel a bit unfamiliar. This unfamiliarity also touches upon the way we think and act in our daily work. We are virtually standing at a crossroads: are we returning to our previous routines or moving ahead by incorporating our new pandemic-related experiences into our routines?
Game-based learning (GBL) and gamification can improve the learning experience of students by making learning more fun, interesting, and motivating. However, integrating games in practice is challenging for many teachers as it requires competences that not necessarily are part of their teaching repertoire. Game-based pedagogy (GBP) refers to the teaching methods and learning processes involved in learning with games. Research stresses the need for adequate professional development and teacher education on GBP. However, there is a lack of empirical knowledge on effective methods to prepare pre-service and in-service teachers for using game-based learning. The aim of our research is to gain insight into the design of effective GBP learning experiences for teachers. The guiding research question was: What design elements of a course on GBL impacted in-service teachers' GBP competences and teaching practice? We investigated this question in the context of a teacher education program in the Fall 2023. We conducted an empirical study in which a course on GBL was designed, implemented, and evaluated in practice. The participants were 16 in-service secondary teachers from different disciplines in secondary education, from which 13 agreed to participate in this study, and three course leaders. We investigated participants’ and course leaders’ experiences, participants’ competences in GBP, the impact on participants’ teaching practice and the way design elements contributed to it. The data consisted of participant reflections, transcripts from participants and course leaders’ interviews and answers to a questionnaire. The data was collected and analysed using quantitative and qualitative methods between January and April 2024. Results reveal that in-service teachers’ improved their competences on GBP and increased their use of GBL in practice. Qualitative data analysis provides insight into the course's design elements and on participants’ learning process. This study contributes to GBP-education by offering a possible design solution and framework for developing effective teacher education.
Dominante onderwijsbenaderingen zien de school als plaats waar je wordt voorbereid op later. Echter, de student leeft nu en in een complexe wereld waarin voorbereiding nooit af is. Wat betekent dat inzicht voor de docent-student-relatie?Doel Met dit onderzoek willen we bijdragen aan een verdere emancipatie van de leerling. Dit behelst dat we ruimte willen vergroten voor de existentiële vragen en ervaringen die de leerling bezig houden en de wijze waarop ze al op jonge leeftijd actief kunnen bijdragen aan de samenleving. Door dit te verbinden aan de rol van de leraar en praktijkervaringen van leraren leggen we de focus op de docent-student-relatie. Resultaten Koen verdedigt op 24 juni 2022 zijn proefschrift "Pedagogy of entanglement: a response to the complex societal challenges that permeate our lives" ("Pedagogiek van verstrengeling: een antwoord op de complexe maatschappelijke uitdagingen die ons leven doordringen…") aan de Universiteit Utrecht. Populaire samenvattingen van zijn proefschrift zijn te vinden onder deze links: populaire samenvatting Nederlands en populaire samenvatting Engels. De wetenschappelijke samenvattingen zijn eveneens te downloaden (zie hieronder). Een pdf of fysieke versie van het proefschrift zijn op te vragen bij Koen (k.r.wessels@uu.nl) Eerdere impressies van zijn onderzoek: Digitale HU-lezing juni 2020 en/of Podcast september 2020 rondom thema "Verstrengeling". Looptijd 01 maart 2018 - 28 februari 2022 Aanpak In de context van het onderzoek gaan we samen met docenten op zoek naar nieuwe manieren om leerlingen en de eigen rol als docent te zien. Hiertoe doet Koen biografische interviews en focusgroepen met een groep docentonderzoekers. Ook doet Koen literatuurstudie en bouwt hij voort op casuïstiek afkomstig uit zijn eigen projectmatige werk in het onderwijsveld verbonden aan De Bildung Academie.
The project Decolonising Education: from Teachers to Leading Learners (DETeLL) aims to develop a multi-site approach for interventions towards inclusion and decolonisation in order to change the hierarchical nature of higher education in the Netherlands. DETeLL identifies the model of the ‘traditional teacher’ as embodying the structural exclusions and discriminations built into the classroom and proposes the figure of a ‘Leading Learner’ as a first step towards a radical change in the educational system. In collaboration with the education departments in the Theatre and Dance Academy at ArtEZ, the post-doc will build up a research and teaching programme that engages with students and teachers in the faculty to create a prototype of an inclusive and diverse educational practice. RELEVANCE: Education should be the critical space in which changes occur in order to shape best possible futures. In DETeLL’s acceptation, decolonisation refers to a complete change in the way of thinking and behaving. It does not refer only to the urgency of dealing with historical colonial legacies embedded in society, but also to the subversion of the deeply oppressive colonial culture that (also unconsciously) regulates public and private living, whether this is related to gender, race, class or sexuality issues. RESULTS: 1) Create a theory and practice-based scientific base-line of decolonisation and art education; 2) Provide a definition of ‘Artist educator as Leading Learner’ following a practice- based methodology of intervention; 3) Design and Pilot a new teaching programme for theatre education at ArtEZ to be then upscaled to all educational departments in a follow-up project); 4) Produce a strong interdisciplinary and international output plan: 3 academic publications, 2 conferences, 4 expert group workshops. NETWORK: ArtEZ; University of Amsterdam (UvA); Ghent University; UCHRI; Hildesheim University; Cape Town University. The partners will serve as steering committee through planned expert group meetings.
"My PD-trajectory aims to contribute to knowledge development in the domains of artacademic institutions, the queer/drag/HIV community, and advocacy as context for queer safety. Emphasis will be placed on how to write, document, design, and archive elements in order to shape language to actively comprehend each other’s affinities, aspirations, and propel visibility for emancipatory realities by creating empathy among differences. Incorporating the theorization of new terms such as “gift dragonomy” and “dragging as grafting” based on drag mothering knowledge will play an active role in preserving subcultural language while avoiding ‘representational fixity.”