Wednesday, 3 August 2016

Knowledge and Expertise

Hello fellow EDU654ers!

A foreword: This is my first time studying externally and I have to admit, I am not feeling very confident about it all. If you’re anything like me, you may feel like you have no idea if you’re on the right track with these blog post summaries and there are perhaps large gaps in your own knowledge and expertise! But anyway, here goes my first blog post:

“Knowledge and expertise.”

The need for graduates in knowledge-intensive organisations to be self-sufficient, life-long personal and professional learners is a recurring theme throughout the readings. This requires “intelligence”, defined as the mental ability to learn and adapt. It also encompasses the ability to form, shape and select their environmental contexts. Of course, academic intelligence is required for memory and analytical skills. However, I believe other attributes and forms of intelligence that are not so easily measured are also vital – creative, practical and social/communication intelligence and skills. As stated in Candy’s article, graduates must have disciplined inquiry, be able to apply their knowledge to problem solving, and must bear insights and explain their knowledge, thus also serving the community.

It is the responsibility of universities to provide the framework to equip graduates with these attributes – i.e. the skills and attitudes to continue life-long learning. They are no longer just "producers and disseminators of knowledge" – they have vital social functions and leadership roles. Like other knowledge-intensive settings, the boundaries have “blurred,” and universities have to collaborate with business, industry and other institutions to remain on this high platform.

Intelligence

Following the readings and a quick Google search, my understanding is that fluid intelligence is the ability to solve new problems, to reason, identify patterns and use logic, independent of any past knowledge. This tends to decrease with age. Crystallised intelligence is the ability to use prior learned knowledge and experience. This often increases with age, especially as our experience expands, and we learn to compensate for lost abilities.

There is also a clear distinction between practical and academic intelligence. Academic intelligence is more abstract and revolves around theoretical tasks. Practical intelligence revolves around efficient and organised real-life everyday tasks and situations. It includes the ability to form relationships and social networks. Features of practical intelligence, as stated in the readings, include flexibility, domains specific knowledge (expertise), effort saving strategies, incorporation of the external environment into problem solving and the ability to reformulate and redefine problems. In terms of education, more practical learners who may not perform well in conventional testing can be taught in ways that allow their practical intelligence to be utilised, and this has shown to result in better performance.

We must keep in mind that intelligence is relevant to each cultural/environmental context, and that people consequently shape and choose their environment. Thus, what one considers intelligent in one context is not always intelligent in another, and people’s intelligence may appear different across settings. The “mental processes” of intelligence gives rise to different behaviours depending on context (including one’s motivation, abilities or interest to apply behaviours). The issue here is that we tend to evaluate people on the resulting behaviour rather than the mental process, and draw conclusions from these. However, it is this mental process that signals intelligence, and this are common across contexts. Another problem revolves around testing of intelligence, as learners can appear intelligent if have same criteria as a test,  which is determined by culture and values (what Sternberg called a “closed system”).

Expertise

An expert is someone that has the practical intelligence in a particular domain/field of work or study. I believe the main basis for developing expertise is TIME (often a life-time) and experience in that field, thus having an understanding (creating and applying knowledge), rather than just academic intelligence and IQ. The Understanding Adult Learners text states that expertise features a superior memory, deeper problem solving skills and analysis, and self development, but ONLY in that particular domain.
This expertise progresses to wisdom  - defined as a “high level peak form of expertise” – a positive aspect of ageing and experience. Hence development in adulthood is vital (including the use of crystallised intelligence), and it is known that cognitive development continues into adulthood, with ongoing constant growth and change and learning desires.

Candy’s concluding statement
"universities are needed more now than ever, because, in a world dominated by knowledge, they represent knowledge work at its highest”

In my own area of expertise (the veterinary industry) universities are, in many cases, the forefront of research and development, often leading by example the gold-standard of knowledge and practice in the field (= Scholarship of Research). They work closely with/for local small business, often as referral centers or sources of knowledge/information/continuing education for veterinarians out in the field, i.e. those with “real-world” problems (= Scholarship of Application).
Graduates are expected to be competent clinicians on their first day out, so the development of knowledge-worker attributes is key, with requirements in life-long learning and a climate of inquiry as an expectation. Vets also become a form of teachers themselves (= Scholarship of Teaching). 
The vet industry is closely linked to those of other medical professions, global public and human health, pharmacological companies, food animal production with economic implications, etc. Thus collaboration with these industries is vital (i.e that blurring of boundaries). The knowledge taught in university is often developed in/by such industries (= Scholarship of Integration).


Thanks guys, I hope you've enjoyed reading my summary of the first 3 readings :)


Julia

3 comments:

  1. I really enjoyed reading this summary Julia. It was very different to how I approached mine but it's very clear and well set out and always good to read others work in order to learn new ways of doing things (lifelong learning!). My background is Social Work, vastly different from your area of expertise. It so interesting to read that the veterinary industry is so closely linked to other medical professions, amazing. Even linked in with public and human health? As you say at the beginning of your post that lifelong learners in a knowledge intensive world need to be self sufficient and adaptable but be provided with the frameworks by Universities who themselves have faced change in a globalized world. I agree and propose that once we are provided with the frameworks then all aspects of learning, intelligence and emotional intelligence come into play in order to make sense and meaning from it. I was very interested in the emotional intelligence part of the readings also and look forward to further research and validation in that area. Thanks Julia for your summary :0

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    1. Hi Yasmin,
      Thanks for your comments. Yes, vets even in public and human health! There are education programs, including in schools and in our indigenous communities, often implemented by/with vets; there are those employed by AQIS (i.e. working in areas of quarantine, in abattoirs etc), and in government sectors working in areas such as epidemiology, connecting spread of disease between humans and animals, especially in wildlife reservoirs and in production (food) animals... this is just to name a few off the top of my head :) Most of these I know little about mind you, as I work solely in general practice, with domestic pets. Anyway, I digress... Julia

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  2. Hi Julia, I agree many parts of your blog, especially around the difficulty of measuring the 'practical' intelligence aspects, in my experience they are demonstrated or applied to a situation or scenario. thanks for your summary I look forward to reading more :)

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