Abstract

ABSTRACT Residential field courses are important and should be designed and delivered to maximize their value to students, staff and institutions. In this context, we use a novel approach involving analysis of the daily affective and conative reflections of students immersed in the field course experience to better understand student engagement with fieldwork. We show that students base their field course choice on a range of factors (costs and benefits) and that these choices subsequently influence student expectations and motivation to engage with fieldwork. We also show that the motivation of students to engage with fieldwork-based learning varies from person to person and from day to day. Our findings suggest that having a more nuanced understanding of the decisions students make when deciding which field course to enrol upon would enhance our ability to design attractive, accessible and useful field courses; that having an awareness of the expectations of students around field courses would enable us to better prepare them to undertake them; and that students are more motivated when they are afforded an opportunity to work independently and perceive themselves to have ownership of their learning.

Highlights

  • Residential field courses are essential components of undergraduate degree programmes in the Environmental Sciences (Biology, Ecology, Geography, Geology etc.) (e.g. Brannstrom & Houser, 2015; Maskall & Stokes, 2008; Scott et al, 2012)

  • Graduates in the Environmental Sciences often refer to a residential field course as being one of, if not the, highlight of their undergraduate degree

  • Our objectives were to: 1) understand how student choice of a particular field course is related to engagement within a field course; 2) establish student expectations at the outset of the field course, and their perceptions of the level to which they are met during it; and 3) understand the day-to-day motivation of students to undertake fieldwork within the field course context

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Summary

Introduction

Residential field courses are essential components of undergraduate degree programmes in the Environmental Sciences (Biology, Ecology, Geography, Geology etc.) (e.g. Brannstrom & Houser, 2015; Maskall & Stokes, 2008; Scott et al, 2012). Graduates in the Environmental Sciences often refer to a residential field course as being one of, if not the, highlight of their undergraduate degree (pers obs). They may enable students to demonstrate that they have the experiences, skills and professional competencies valued by employers (Arrowsmith et al, 2011; Welsh & France, 2012). University managers recognise their value in enhancing institutional reputation

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