School enculturation discourse: a meta synthesis from research in the learning sciences
Information and Learning Sciences
ISSN: 2398-5348
Article publication date: 20 September 2022
Issue publication date: 24 October 2022
Abstract
Purpose
Enculturation is a central and defining idea within socioculturally minded research that informs the design of school learning environments. Now, three decades since the idea has emerged in the field, the authors believe it is time to reflect on it because of several ambiguities that have emerged from its use, which is the purpose of this study
Design/methodology/approach
The authors carried out a metasynthesis of learning scientists’ school enculturation discourse. This included reviewing the concept within 84 articles found in six leading and relevant learning sciences journals.
Findings
This study’s findings show that school enculturation discourse is divided between those that view it unidirectionally, bidirectionally or both, and that three reifications of associated cultures (authentic, designed and traditional) together with various conduits frame the way learning environments are designed to facilitate enculturation.
Research limitations/implications
This metasynthesis can help advance sociocultural research in schools by clarifying the meaning and conceptualization of a central idea in the field.
Practical implications
This study can help teachers and educational researchers clarify the role that culture has in the designs of their learning environments.
Social implications
Culture is a vital facet of learning; designers of learning environments need to understand the way culture interplays with learning.
Originality/value
As this research shows, current school enculturation discourse is vague and often appears to be applied inconsistently. It is vital for any field to reflect on its own discourse to sharpen the conceptual tools that it uses so that it can advance.
Keywords
Citation
Hod, Y. and Sagy, O. (2022), "School enculturation discourse: a meta synthesis from research in the learning sciences", Information and Learning Sciences, Vol. 123 No. 9/10, pp. 621-641. https://doi.org/10.1108/ILS-11-2021-0103
Publisher
:Emerald Publishing Limited
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