Abstract
Providing higher education which is also relevant for a society and its labor market is one of the
biggest challenges in the educational system of today (e. g. George, 2006; Gibbons, 1998; Teichler,
2015). This provision of relevant higher education calls for the implementation and use of
instructional formats which hold the power to bridge research, teaching and practice in a feasible way
(e. g. Gómez et al., 2007). Specifically, respective formats for that must provide both learning for the
development of a scholarly mindset and for the acquisition of work-related generic and disciplinespecific
competences (e. g. Chu, Reynolds, Tavares, Notari, & Lee, 2017).
Aalborg University holds a long tradition of basing its teaching on the principles of Problem-based
Learning (PBL, e. g. Kolomos, Fink, & Krogh, 2004). Parallelly, the Danish higher education sector
in general is focused on providing societally relevant learning outcomes (Vingaard Johansen et al.,
2017), with in the last two decades establishing a close relation with stakeholders from the corporate
world to ensure the relevance of candidates’ competences for the labor market. At Aalborg University
this shows as a dual relevance orientation throughout the study programs, with a specific, yet
continuously evolving interpretation of Problem-based Learning that explicitly addresses the
connection between scholarly learning and the use of the knowledge in concrete vocational fields.
The present symposium will present current examples of how PBL is used at Aalborg University to
provide an education which addresses both the development of a scholarly mindset and the
affordances of the (Danish) labor market. This comprises cross-faculty collaborations and an adaption
of the traditionally semester-long PBL project work to fit with a more timely, short-term format
(paper #1), the collaboration with a local company in early stages of a study program (paper #2) and
the re-conceptualization of competence expectations towards PBL through the student perspective
(paper #3). Together the three papers shed light on both instructional variations and new conceptions
of intended outcomes of learning with the PBL
biggest challenges in the educational system of today (e. g. George, 2006; Gibbons, 1998; Teichler,
2015). This provision of relevant higher education calls for the implementation and use of
instructional formats which hold the power to bridge research, teaching and practice in a feasible way
(e. g. Gómez et al., 2007). Specifically, respective formats for that must provide both learning for the
development of a scholarly mindset and for the acquisition of work-related generic and disciplinespecific
competences (e. g. Chu, Reynolds, Tavares, Notari, & Lee, 2017).
Aalborg University holds a long tradition of basing its teaching on the principles of Problem-based
Learning (PBL, e. g. Kolomos, Fink, & Krogh, 2004). Parallelly, the Danish higher education sector
in general is focused on providing societally relevant learning outcomes (Vingaard Johansen et al.,
2017), with in the last two decades establishing a close relation with stakeholders from the corporate
world to ensure the relevance of candidates’ competences for the labor market. At Aalborg University
this shows as a dual relevance orientation throughout the study programs, with a specific, yet
continuously evolving interpretation of Problem-based Learning that explicitly addresses the
connection between scholarly learning and the use of the knowledge in concrete vocational fields.
The present symposium will present current examples of how PBL is used at Aalborg University to
provide an education which addresses both the development of a scholarly mindset and the
affordances of the (Danish) labor market. This comprises cross-faculty collaborations and an adaption
of the traditionally semester-long PBL project work to fit with a more timely, short-term format
(paper #1), the collaboration with a local company in early stages of a study program (paper #2) and
the re-conceptualization of competence expectations towards PBL through the student perspective
(paper #3). Together the three papers shed light on both instructional variations and new conceptions
of intended outcomes of learning with the PBL
Original language | English |
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Publication date | 2019 |
Publication status | Published - 2019 |
Event | The Higher Education Conference 2019: Exploring the research-teaching-praxis nexus - Hogeschool van Amsterdam Hva, Amsterdam, Netherlands Duration: 28 Oct 2019 → 29 Oct 2019 Conference number: 2 https://www.hec2019.nl/108493 |
Conference
Conference | The Higher Education Conference 2019 |
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Number | 2 |
Location | Hogeschool van Amsterdam Hva |
Country/Territory | Netherlands |
City | Amsterdam |
Period | 28/10/2019 → 29/10/2019 |
Internet address |