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Articles

Fieldwork@40: fieldwork in geography higher education

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Pages 498-514 | Received 10 May 2017, Accepted 19 Aug 2018, Published online: 09 Sep 2018
 

ABSTRACT

Fieldwork is the most powerful learning invitation in the toolkit of Geographical Education. This review of papers in The Journal of Geography in Higher Education (JGHE) suggests seven modes in the development of fieldwork. These are arrayed as a kind of historical, perhaps evolutionary, sequence but most remain current in Geography fieldwork practice. At the far end (1960s) of the sequence are didactic modes that are teacher centred and use the field as an adjunct to the classroom, in the middle (1990s) are modes that involve active learning and focus on the development of students as investigators and at the near end (2010s) are those that centred on the field study area and its qualities, that involve concern about the ethics of student engagement and that employ blended learning technologies. The review charts the JGHE’s gradual shift away from its original, almost exclusively, UK-focus toward something rather more international and inclusive. Fieldwork is where Geographers learn “from doing” Geography to “do” Geography. Its special attributes include providing experiential, sometimes transformative, learning through the immersion of the learner in the field experience. In 40 years, JGHE has helped Geography Fieldwork move from the margins of the curriculum to its current place at its core.

Acknowledgments

Thanks to Emma Nadan for her time and assistance with the construction of the Figures in this manuscript. Thanks also to those anonymous reviewers tasked with reviewing this manuscript.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

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