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Navigating between Scylla and Charybdis: SoTL as Its Own Kind of Inquiry

Authors :
Jennifer Löfgreen
Source :
Teaching & Learning Inquiry. 2023 11.
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

Although there is ample literature that explores what SoTL is and offers guidelines on how to do SoTL, we have not paid enough attention to the fundamental assumptions that underpin systematic scholarly inquiry itself, regardless of the context or the object of study. Instead, we seem to have a narrative that relates SoTL to the disciplines and/or educational research. In this paper, I challenge this narrative with the help of philosophy of science. Specifically, I argue that SoTL is at risk of being appropriated by disciplinary paradigms. This means we would do well to adjust how we conceptualize SoTL. To find a better way, I use Habermas' concept of "knowledge-constitutive interests" to argue that we should start by recognizing the fundamental interests at play when we do SoTL, regardless of disciplinary context. I connect Habermas' three interests (instrumental, interpretive, and emancipatory) to Hutchings' taxonomy of SoTL questions ("what works? what is?" and "what could be?") and to three basic paradigms of inquiry (normative, interpretive, and critical realist). These connections show how philosophy of science in the form of Habermas' critical theory can combine with existing conceptual literature on SoTL and established paradigms of inquiry that exist independently of the disciplines. I aim to show that we can use philosophy of science to conceptualize SoTL in a way that allows it to stand fully on its own merits, as its own form of inquiry, with disciplinary perspectives only influencing it in appropriate and useful ways.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
2167-4779 and 2167-4787
Volume :
11
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Teaching & Learning Inquiry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
EJ1416028
Document Type :
Journal Articles<br />Reports - Evaluative