Abstract
This paper uses phenomenography to identify undergraduates' conceptions of teaching, learning and geography and examine whether there are any differences between students in Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the United States. The paper shows that there are several distinct conceptions of teaching, learning and geography. Teaching is seen as either information transfer or as helping learning. The study finds that geography students hold five of the conceptions of learning found by Marton et al. (Citation1993). Student conceptions of geography range from the very general such as the study of the world or the study or the distinct physical and human dimensions of the world to ideas of geography as people–environment interactions or as spatial organization or of areal differentiation and the study of places. There are no clear patterns of national variation in the conceptions held by geography students. The implications for teaching and curriculum design of undergraduates' conceptions of geography are considered.
Notes
Correspondence address: John Bradbeer, Department of Geography, University of Portsmouth, Buckingham Building, Lion Terrace, Portsmouth PO1 3HE, UK. Email: [email protected]
The members of the INLTGHE team are Richard Baker (Australian National University), Robert Bednarz (Texas A & M), John Bradbeer (Portsmouth), Andrew Bradley (Gloucestershire), John Campbell (Waikato), Susan Hardwick (Oregon), Mick Healey (Gloucestershire), Roy Jones (Curtin), Pauline Kneale (Leeds), Richard Le Heron (Auckland), Kevin McCracken (Macquarie), Melanie Milicich (Auckland), Eric Pawson (Canterbury), Alan Pilgrim (Curtin), Diana Porteous (Waikato), Michael Solem (Southwest Texas), Christina Stringer (Auckland).