No teacher can proceed without the conviction that he/she can produce a change in the students he/she teaches. Causality therefore has always formed an integral part of pedagogical thinking. However, initial attempts, to incorporate causality into pedagogical theory failed. As a result, causality was then rejected. More recently, however, research in psychology, sociology, and organizational theory sought to re-introduce causality in ways that enable its incorporation into pedagogical theory. But even these efforts were not without problems. Second-order observation takes a step back from this endeavor to see what distinctions are made in attributing causes, and which ones are not.
Enthalten in:
Zeitschrift für Pädagogik; 2018/3
(2018)
Weiterführende Informationen
Serie / Reihe: Zeitschrift für Pädagogik
Personen: Bednarz, John
Bednarz, John:
Causality, technology and instruction / John Bednarz, Jr., 2018. - Seite 394-410 - (Zeitschrift für Pädagogik)
Zeitschriftenartikel