

Author: Groves Mark Leflay Kathryn Smith Julian Bowd Belinda Barber Alison
Publisher: Routledge Ltd
ISSN: 1470-1294
Source: Teaching in Higher Education, Vol.18, Iss.5, 2013-07, pp. : 545-556
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Abstract
Teachers have only recently considered how study skills support in higher education (HE) can be delivered in a way that encourages experiential learning. This paper aims to substantiate, or otherwise, the idea that a carefully developed initiative can encourage the experiential learning of study skills. In addition, it considers whether such an approach might also allow student access to some of the higher-level study skills required for successful university study. Focus group data were used to evaluate a module delivered to sports students at a post-1992 university in the UK. This data suggested that the module facilitated learning in each stage of Kolb's experiential learning cycle. Moreover, there was evidence that the module encouraged students to undertake an `epistemological shift' in which they moved from seeing knowledge as a set of uncontested facts to seeing it as something that they are expected to question and contribute to themselves.
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