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Learner Engagement: A Review of Approaches in the Psychology of Education and Art Education
Author(s) -
Kinsella Claire,
Putwain David W.,
Kaye Linda K.
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
review of education
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 2049-6613
DOI - 10.1002/rev3.3063
Subject(s) - scope (computer science) , narrative , epistemology , discipline , diversity (politics) , sociology , order (exchange) , pedagogy , psychology , social science , computer science , philosophy , linguistics , finance , anthropology , economics , programming language
This article critically examines the concept of ‘engagement’ as it has emerged within two distinct bodies of literature in the fields of art education and the psychology of education. In order to grapple with the heterogeneous nature of this literature, a meta‐narrative review was conducted whereby recurring narratives from various sub‐fields including special educational needs, gallery education and human development, were systematically identified and analysed in order to clarify the diversity of ways in which the concept of engagement is used within different research traditions. Areas of overlap between the ways in which the concept is understood and treated within these various texts were examined, as well as a consideration of the potential for any tensions to arise between them. It will be argued that the gap between the manner in which learner engagement is conceived and employed within these disciplines is not as wide as one might presume and that rather than these being incongruous with one another, in many respects, the approaches adopted within each discipline are complementary. It will be suggested that with further disciplinary exchange, especially with respect to the role of educational artefacts and social signals arising during the learning process, wider scope arises for advancing our understanding of learner engagement.