How can legends be used in research-based teaching?

The objective of this article is to consider legends and show how these oral narratives were used in my research-based teaching at the Institute of Teacher Education and Pedagogy of the University of Tromsø – the Arctic University of Norway – in the period of 2003 – 2012. During this time period I t...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Larsen, Roald
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://apcz.umk.pl/CSNME/article/view/CSNME.2017.004
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author Larsen, Roald
author_facet Larsen, Roald
author_sort Larsen, Roald
collection Unknown
description The objective of this article is to consider legends and show how these oral narratives were used in my research-based teaching at the Institute of Teacher Education and Pedagogy of the University of Tromsø – the Arctic University of Norway – in the period of 2003 – 2012. During this time period I took the lead in doing research and development work when my students and I collected a lot of legends mainly from Northern Norway. The reason why pedagogy students were involved in this work is that legends can be applied as a method of knowledge development. This will be helpful when the students become trained teachers and face their own pupils at primary and lower secondary school. Working with legends the students become aware of their own culture and culture of others, and thereby such a project will be a gateway to establishing knowledge structures. Moreover, each student receives training in his/her own writing skills. From start to finish this piece of work gives invaluable learning about one’s own creative activity.In this article it will be defined what legends are, what type of legends there exist and what was registered about legends in the curriculum at the time which gave guideline to this project. It will be mainly focused on how one can work with legends in the student class, but also somewhat on what knowledge and experience such a project can give.When it comes to the text form under consideration, the Norwegian word for it is sagn. In English translation the word legend is often used. Although the word legende (hagiographical story) in the Norwegian language characterizes religious texts[1] I will still use the word legend about this text form.[1] Legende (hagiographical story) denotes originally a narrative about holy men and women. These narratives are edificatory stories about religious events, miracles and martyrs. The word «legende» (legenda/legere) comes from Latin and means something that should be read.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
genre Northern Norway
Arctic University of Norway
University of Tromsø
genre_facet Northern Norway
Arctic University of Norway
University of Tromsø
geographic Arctic
Martyrs
Norway
Tromsø
geographic_facet Arctic
Martyrs
Norway
Tromsø
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institution Open Polar
language English
long_lat ENVELOPE(140.015,140.015,-66.669,-66.669)
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op_relation https://apcz.umk.pl/CSNME/article/view/CSNME.2017.004/14873
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op_rights Prawa autorskie (c) 2018 Cognitive Science – New Media – Education
op_source Cognitive Science – New Media – Education; Vol. 2 No. 1 (2017); 59-74
Cognitive Science – New Media – Education; Tom 2 Nr 1 (2017); 59-74
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publisher Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu
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spelling ftunivtorunojs:oai:apcz.umk.pl:article/17029 2025-01-16T23:54:03+00:00 How can legends be used in research-based teaching? Larsen, Roald 2018-04-14 application/pdf https://apcz.umk.pl/CSNME/article/view/CSNME.2017.004 eng eng Uniwersytet Mikołaja Kopernika w Toruniu https://apcz.umk.pl/CSNME/article/view/CSNME.2017.004/14873 https://apcz.umk.pl/CSNME/article/view/CSNME.2017.004 Prawa autorskie (c) 2018 Cognitive Science – New Media – Education Cognitive Science – New Media – Education; Vol. 2 No. 1 (2017); 59-74 Cognitive Science – New Media – Education; Tom 2 Nr 1 (2017); 59-74 2543-506X Sagn hagiographical story teaching legend collecting activity curriculum knowledge development info:eu-repo/semantics/article info:eu-repo/semantics/publishedVersion 2018 ftunivtorunojs 2022-08-19T07:27:37Z The objective of this article is to consider legends and show how these oral narratives were used in my research-based teaching at the Institute of Teacher Education and Pedagogy of the University of Tromsø – the Arctic University of Norway – in the period of 2003 – 2012. During this time period I took the lead in doing research and development work when my students and I collected a lot of legends mainly from Northern Norway. The reason why pedagogy students were involved in this work is that legends can be applied as a method of knowledge development. This will be helpful when the students become trained teachers and face their own pupils at primary and lower secondary school. Working with legends the students become aware of their own culture and culture of others, and thereby such a project will be a gateway to establishing knowledge structures. Moreover, each student receives training in his/her own writing skills. From start to finish this piece of work gives invaluable learning about one’s own creative activity.In this article it will be defined what legends are, what type of legends there exist and what was registered about legends in the curriculum at the time which gave guideline to this project. It will be mainly focused on how one can work with legends in the student class, but also somewhat on what knowledge and experience such a project can give.When it comes to the text form under consideration, the Norwegian word for it is sagn. In English translation the word legend is often used. Although the word legende (hagiographical story) in the Norwegian language characterizes religious texts[1] I will still use the word legend about this text form.[1] Legende (hagiographical story) denotes originally a narrative about holy men and women. These narratives are edificatory stories about religious events, miracles and martyrs. The word «legende» (legenda/legere) comes from Latin and means something that should be read. Article in Journal/Newspaper Northern Norway Arctic University of Norway University of Tromsø Unknown Arctic Martyrs ENVELOPE(140.015,140.015,-66.669,-66.669) Norway Tromsø
spellingShingle Sagn
hagiographical story
teaching
legend collecting activity
curriculum
knowledge development
Larsen, Roald
How can legends be used in research-based teaching?
title How can legends be used in research-based teaching?
title_full How can legends be used in research-based teaching?
title_fullStr How can legends be used in research-based teaching?
title_full_unstemmed How can legends be used in research-based teaching?
title_short How can legends be used in research-based teaching?
title_sort how can legends be used in research-based teaching?
topic Sagn
hagiographical story
teaching
legend collecting activity
curriculum
knowledge development
topic_facet Sagn
hagiographical story
teaching
legend collecting activity
curriculum
knowledge development
url https://apcz.umk.pl/CSNME/article/view/CSNME.2017.004