Engaging Students in the Classroom: How Can I Know What I Think Until I See What I Draw?

26 Pages Posted: 1 Aug 2011 Last revised: 5 Aug 2011

See all articles by John Hogan

John Hogan

Dublin Institute of Technology

Paul F Donnelly

Dublin Institute of Technology

Date Written: August 5, 2011

Abstract

Recognizing the world into which our students will emerge upon graduation, a world characterized by constant change, and our belief in the need to develop our students as “critical beings” (Barnett, 1997) and as “citizens capable of governing” (Giroux, 1997: 259), we embrace a critical pedagogy that is not just about theory (Dehler, Welsh & Lewis, 2004), but can also be implemented experientially in the classroom through the use of freehand drawing. With this as context, our aim in the classroom is to create a learning space where our students develop their capacity for critical self-reflection. As such, we use freehand drawing to: (a) facilitate our ability to “see” how we understand a topic and to “see” that there are multiple ways of understanding; (b) question and challenge theories, orthodoxies and truths considered common; (c) identify and scrutinize what are often tacit assumptions; and (d) ponder other possibilities.

Keywords: critical pedagogy, freehand drawing, Irish politics, management education

Suggested Citation

Hogan, John and Donnelly, Paul F, Engaging Students in the Classroom: How Can I Know What I Think Until I See What I Draw? (August 5, 2011). APSA 2011 Annual Meeting Paper, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=1903276

John Hogan (Contact Author)

Dublin Institute of Technology ( email )

College of Business
Aungier Street (3-062)
Dublin 2
Ireland

Paul F Donnelly

Dublin Institute of Technology ( email )

College of Business
Aungier Street (3-062)
Dublin 2
Ireland

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