FEATURES OF THE STUDY OF GEO-INFORMATION SYSTEMS IN THE TRAINING OF STUDENTS OF THE SPECIALTY «GEODESY AND LAND SURVEYING»
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.33042/2522-1809-2023-4-178-157-166Keywords:
integrated learning, cognitive activity, self-development, levels of integration of educational material, transdisciplinary learning, interdisciplinary connections, competenceAbstract
The article highlights the problems and tasks that have intensified in higher education under the conditions of a long period of distance learning and martial law. Questions about the need to create integrated education are particularly argued and lapidary. This has a positive effect on the development of independence, cognitive activity and interests of modern higher education seekers. In this way, the acquirers show the development of creative thinking according to their own architecture. At the same time, significant complications of its content and a significant increase in the amount of knowledge are becoming characteristic features of modern education. Therefore, it is necessary to develop and introduce the latest educational paradigms into pedagogical practice. This should be based on the results of a significant rethinking of the very goals of education, its nature and technology. In the general structure of the set of these attributes of education, an extremely important place should be occupied by pedagogical influence on student youth. At the same time, this influence should consist in the formation of students' motivation to properly master the educational material. It is also necessary to properly organize pedagogical influence and transdisciplinary connections when teaching educational material. This should be considered as the main way of effectively solving the main tasks of education. From this follows the need to train a new generation of specialists. Who will be able to creatively adapt to the fast-moving environment with knowledge of the matter. They will be able to move from one type of work to another, all this ultimately determines the very heuristic approach to education. It is this approach that will help to change the usual reproductive activity of the student in classes. The student will be involved in active assimilation of new material and independent analysis in solving problem situations. Then the student will be able to enter the context of future professional activity. All these measures will contribute to the intensification of the educational process. This will ultimately have a positive effect on the quality of education and the value of the future graduate in the eyes of a potential employer.
References
Pazynich, S., & Pomortseva, O. (2021). Some features of higher education during the pandemic. New Collegium, 3(105), 19-28. https://doi.org/10.30837/nc.2021.3.19
Deana D., Pennington Gary L., Simpson Marjorie S., McConnell Jeanne M., & FairRobert J. (2013). Transdisciplinary Research, Transformative Learning, and Transformative Science. BioScience, Volume 63, Issue 7, pp. 564–573.
López-Huertas, M. (2013). Reflexions on multidimensional knowledge: Its influence on the foundation of knowledge organization. Knowledge Organization, Volume 40(6), pp. 400‒407. http://dx.doi.org/10.5771/0943-7444-2013-6-400
Basarab Nicolescu (2010) Methodology of Transdisciplinarity – Levels of Reality, Logic of the Included Middle and Complexity. Transdisciplinary Journal of Engineering & Science, Volume 1, pp. 17‒32. https://doi.org/10.22545/2010/0009
Evans, T. L. (2015). Transdisciplinary collaborations for sustainability education: Institutional and intragroup challenges and opportunities. Policy Futures in Education, Volume 13(1), pp. 70‒97. https://doi.org/10.1177/1478210314566731
Meteshkin, K. O., Morozova, O. I., & Pomortseva, O. Y. (2021). The results of department educational processes reengineering in dual and digital education concepts. Radioelectronic and Computer Systems, 1, 92-100. http://dx.doi.org/10.32620/reks.2021.1.08
Meteshkin, K. O., & Pomortseva, O. Y. (2013). Possibilities and problems of re-engineering processes that take place in the department of a higher education institution. Information technologies and teaching aids, 35(3), 46-53.
Shinkaruk, V.D., Rakovsky, H.V., & Meteshkin K.A. (2008). A systematic approach to the study of integration processes in higher education of Ukraine. High school, Volume 9, рр.. 12 - 28.
Castán Broto, V., Gislason, M., & Ehlers, M. H. (2002). Practising interdisciplinarity in the interplay between disciplines: Experiences of established researchers. Environmental Science & Policy, Volume 12(7), pp. 922‒933. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.envsci.2009.04.005
Augsburg, T. (2014). Becoming transdisciplinary: The emergence of the transdisciplinary individual. World Futures, Volume 70 (3‒4), pp. 233‒247.
Jay Hillel Bernstein (2015). Transdisciplinarity: A Review of Its Origins, Development, and Current Issues. Journal of Research Practice, Volume 11, Issue 1, Article R1, pp. 1‒20.
Kobzan S., Pomortseva O. (2023) Real Estate Market of Ukraine. Practical Aspects and Trends. Springer. Part of the book series: SpringerBriefs in Geography, 146 р. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-31248-9
Downloads
Published
How to Cite
Issue
Section
License
The authors who publish in this collection agree with the following terms:
• The authors reserve the right to authorship of their work and give the magazine the right to first publish this work under the terms of license CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 (with the Designation of Authorship - Non-Commercial - Without Derivatives 4.0 International), which allows others to freely distribute the published work with a mandatory reference to the authors of the original work and the first publication of the work in this magazine.
• Authors have the right to make independent extra-exclusive work agreements in the form in which they were published by this magazine (for example, posting work in an electronic repository of an institution or publishing as part of a monograph), provided that the link to the first publication of the work in this journal is maintained. .
• Journal policy allows and encourages the publication of manuscripts on the Internet (for example, in institutions' repositories or on personal websites), both before the publication of this manuscript and during its editorial work, as it contributes to the emergence of productive scientific discussion and positively affects the efficiency and dynamics of the citation of the published work (see The Effect of Open Access).