Epistemic insight means ‘knowledge about knowledge’ – and, particularly, knowledge about disciplines and how they interact.
The Epistemic Insight Initiative is developing ways to teach epistemic insight in schools, colleges and teacher education. The launch was filmed by BBC Breakfast
News, Comments and Events
Join us in our Investigating Big Questions Project for Schools to make hands-on science activities accessible to all children
Written by Caroline Thomas,Senior Lecturer in Education and Research Fellow for LASAR, Canterbury Christ Church University If you are a Key Stage 2 or 3 teacher passionate about promoting children's learning in science, consider joining our Investigating Big Questions...
Scholarship day: Insights and Perspectives: Student as Researcher
We are organising another Scholarship Day on 21st May 2021. This will be an online event and all sessions will be recorded throughout the day. The sessions will run from 9.30 until 2.30. Access links to two virtual rooms and the detailed programme can be downloaded...
Troubled Souls!
Written by Dr. Mehdi Nassaji Our recent research paper entitled “Secondary School Students’ Reasoning About Science and Personhood” is now published online. The study reported in this paper sought to discover whether students perceive tension between what they suppose...
About Our Research
Wising up to how knowledge works
The LASAR (Learning about Science and Religion) research group conducted research to discover how students reason about Big Questions and how Big Questions are managed in schools. The research concluded that schools need to do more to help young people to understand how scholarship and knowledge work not only within their subjects but also across them.
Opportunities for Big Questions
The research discovered that secondary schools typically provide few opportunities for asking Big Questions and for exploring and talking about the distinctive approaches that different diciplines take.
Further, there is a basis to say that the impacts of entrenched compartmentalisation on students’ reasoning are largely hidden – because assessment tends to focus only on students’ progress within each subject.
Meanwhile in primary schools although cross-curricular work is more common, the focus for students is often about learning content knowledge rather than about the structure of the disciplines themselves.
Co-creating research
Canterbury Christ Church University’s research strategy includes creating a university student population who are active researchers in the fields where they aspire to work. It’s an ambition that fits very well with our own vision to develop co-created research projects that are conducted with and by our university tutors, researchers and students.
A Programme of Epistemic Insight
A programme of Epistemic Insight introduces students to scholarly ways of working such as learning about different tools for inquiry.
Teacher Education
Developing Epistemic Insight is centralised in the Teacher Education that takes place in institutions that share strategies, resources and pedagogies.
Epistemic Insight is progressive
Epistemic insight is progressive – it builds up as students move up through school, through college, through university and beyond.
The Epistemic Insight Initiative is a ‘work in progress’ and an active research area that is underway in schools and universities – in England and internationally.