Alternatives to the behavioural technicist conception of study skills |
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Authors: | Nico Cloete Ian Shochet |
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Affiliation: | (1) University of the Witwatersrand, 1 Jan Smuts Avenue, 2001 Johannesburg, South Africa |
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Abstract: | The what and how of study skills programmes are critiqued and alternatives suggested. Due to the absence of information about higher level learning, study skills courses have traditionally focused on study behaviours, rather than upon the cognitive processes involved in mastering complex material. By providing knowledge about the cognitive skills and strategies involved in the acquisition and organization of high level learning, information-processing could form the basis of future learning-skills programmes. Infusing learning skills into the curriculum from a phenomenological-critical theory perspective, means that the study skills counsellor becomes a social change agent aiming for the enlightenment and emancipation of students and lecturers. This is a radical departure from the behavioural-technician remedying a deficit group in a special programme or study laboratory. |
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