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Geographic contributions to institutional curriculum reform in Australia: the challenge of embedding field-based learning
Authors:Kate Lloyd  Richard Howitt  Rebecca Bilous  Lindie Clark  Robyn Dowling  Robert Fagan
Institution:1. Department of Geography and Planning, Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia;2. Professional and Community Engagement (PACE), Macquarie University, Sydney, Australiakate.lloyd@mq.edu.au;4. Professional and Community Engagement (PACE), Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia
Abstract:Abstract

In the context of continuing pressures from managerialist and neoliberal drivers of university reform in Australia, Macquarie University’s recent undergraduate curriculum innovation, based on “People,” “Planet,” and “Participation,” has resulted in the embedding and integration of experiential learning in its curriculum and institutional framework. Such an approach challenges academic and administrative staff, students, and partners in industry, the community and public sector settings, to engage and collaborate across significant boundaries. This article outlines the scope and nature of the curriculum reform, then considers the way geographers have both shaped and responded to the opportunities it created. In so doing, it proposes a number of challenges and recommendations for geographers who might seek to extend their longstanding commitment to field-based learning through similar reforms. In this regard, the discipline of geography and its tendency to engage with the “field” can offer much in fostering deeply transformative learning.
Keywords:Fieldwork  field-based learning  experiential learning  community engagement
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