204) there has been a clear and supportive relationship between these classes and the lectures Good understanding requires interconnected knowledge. Building on the existing knowledge, cross-referencing, identifying relevance of knowledge and applying theoretical knowledge to practical situations are part of constructing interconnected knowledge. · Boud, Dunn & Hegarty-Hazel (1986) provide many ways of sequencing and relating different parts of a course/ unit (Chap 3, pp. 57-78). · Hounsell (1997) outlines the need to “anchor knowledge in a framework of meaning” (p. 244) and cites examples of using tutorials and multimedia to aid the understanding of lecture content. · Laurillard (1993) Rethinking University Teaching (pp.56-58) elaborates on the "integrative aspect of learning" and maintains that "learning academic knowledge ... requires activities that address and deal with relations" (p. 56).
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