Authenticity work in higher education learning environments: a double-edged sword?
Journal article, 2022

Educational authenticity occupies a strong position in higher education research and reform, building on the assumption that correspondence between higher education learning environments and professional settings is a driver of student engagement and transfer of knowledge beyond academia. In this paper, we draw attention to an overlooked aspect of authenticity, namely the rhetorical work teachers engage in to establish their learning environments as authentic and pedagogically appropriate. We use the term “authenticity work” to denote such rhetorical work. Drawing on ethnography and critical discourse analysis, we describe how two teachers engaged in authenticity work through renegotiating professional and educational discourse in their project-based engineering course. This ideological project was facilitated by three discursive strategies: (1) deficitization of students and academia, (2) naturalization of industry practices, and (3) polarization of the state of affairs in academia and in industry. Our findings suggest that authenticity work is a double-edged sword: While authenticity work may serve to bolster the legitimacy that is ascribed to learning environments, it may also close down opportunities for students to develop critical thinking about their profession and their education. Based on these findings, we discuss implications for teaching and propose a nascent research agenda for authenticity work in higher education learning environments.

Authenticity work

Authentic learning

Engineering education

Critical discourse analysis

Critical thinking

Ethnography

Author

Oskar Hagvall Svensson

Chalmers, Communication and Learning in Science, Engineering Education Research - EER (Chalmers)

Tom Adawi

Chalmers, Communication and Learning in Science, Engineering Education Research - EER (Chalmers)

Anders Johansson

Chalmers, Communication and Learning in Science, Engineering Education Research - EER (Chalmers)

Higher Education

0018-1560 (ISSN) 1573-174X (eISSN)

Vol. 84 1 67-84

Subject Categories

Didactics

Social Sciences Interdisciplinary

Pedagogy

DOI

10.1007/s10734-021-00753-0

More information

Latest update

10/17/2022