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Articles

Student Journals: A Means of Assessing Transformative Learning in Aging Related Courses

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Abstract

In courses where topics are sensitive or even considered taboo for discussion, it can be difficult to assess students’ deeper learning. In addition, incorporating a wide variety of students’ values and beliefs, designing instructional strategies and including varied assessments adds to the difficulty. Journal entries or response notebooks can highlight reflection upon others’ viewpoints, class readings, and additional materials. These are useful across all educational levels in deep learning and comprehension strategies assessments. Journaling meshes with transformative learning constructs, allowing for critical self-reflection essential to transformation. Qualitative analysis of journals in a death and dying class reveals three transformative themes: awareness of others, questioning, and comfort. Students’ journal entries demonstrate transformative learning via communication with others through increased knowledge/exposure to others’ experiences and comparing/contrasting others’ personal beliefs with their own. Using transformative learning within gerontology and geriatrics education, as well as other disciplined aging-related courses is discussed.

ACKNOWLEDGMENT

This article is an expansion of the following conference presentations:

Cohen, A., & Brown, P. (Citation2012). Teaching d(eath) & d(ying): Combating the challenges of two pedagogies. Poster presented at the Association for Death Education and Counseling’s Annual Conference, Atlanta, GA.

Morales, J., & Cohen, A. (2014). Integrating the student perspective into the research process: student as co-researcher. Paper presented at the Georgia Southern University SoTL Commons Conference, Coastal Georgia Center, Savannah, GA.

Cohen, A., & Brown, P. (2014). Transformative learning in online and face-to-face death and dying classes. Paper presented at the Southern Gerontological Society’s Annual Conference, Little Rock, AR.

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