Frontiers in Education (Mar 2021)

FALKE: Experiences From Transdisciplinary Educational Research by Fourteen Disciplines

  • Anita Schilcher,
  • Stefan Krauss,
  • Petra Kirchhoff,
  • Alfred Lindl,
  • Sven Hilbert,
  • Katharina Asen-Molz,
  • Christina Ehras,
  • Michael Elmer,
  • Mario Frei,
  • Lisa Gaier,
  • Maria Gastl-Pischetsrieder,
  • Eileen Gunga,
  • Renate Murmann,
  • Simone Röhrl,
  • Anna-Maria Ruck,
  • Matthias Weich,
  • Arne Dittmer,
  • Michael Fricke,
  • Bernhard Hofmann,
  • Josef Memminger,
  • Astrid Rank,
  • Oliver Tepner,
  • Christiane Thim-Mabrey

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/feduc.2020.579982
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5

Abstract

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This article details how the FALKE research project (Fachspezifische Lehrerkompetenzen im Erklären; Engl.: subject-specific teacher competency in explaining) integrates 14 heterogeneous disciplines in order to empirically examine the didactic quality of teacher explanations in eleven school subjects by bringing together trans-, multi-, and interdisciplinary perspectives. In order to illustrate the academic landscape of the FALKE project we briefly outline the nature of the transdisciplinary German “Fachdidaktiken” (Engl.: subject-matter didactics, i.e., special academic disciplines of teaching and learning specific school subjects). The FALKE project required the willingness of all researchers from eleven participating subject-matter didactics to rely on both the concepts and the methods of educational sciences as an overarching research framework (transdisciplinary aspect). All researchers of subject-matter didactics had to develop a shared conceptual, methodological, and administrative framework in order to empirically investigate commonalities in and differences between “good explanations” across the range of school subjects represented (multidisciplinary aspect). The additional perspectives of researchers in speech science and linguistics proved fruitful in recognizing rhetorical and linguistic aspects of teacher explanations (interdisciplinary aspect). Data management and statistical analysis were provided by the discipline methods of educational sciences. Rather than reporting empirical results, we here discuss opportunities and challenges as well as the lessons learned from the FALKE project regarding cognitive-epistemic reasoning, communication, and organization.

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