Learning Through Practice
Details
Practice-based learningthe kind of education that comes from experiencing real work in real situationshas always been a prerequisite to qualification in professions such as medicine. However, there is growing interest in how practice-based models of learning can assist the initial preparation for and further development of skills for a wider range of occupations. Rather than being seen as a tool of first-time training, it is now viewed as a potentially important facet of professional development and life-long learning. This book provides perspectives on practice-based learning from a range of disciplines and fields of work. The collection here draws on a wide spectrum of perspectives to illustrate as well as to critically appraise approaches to practice-based learning. The book's two sections first explore the conceptual foundations of learning through practice, and then provide detailed examples of its implementation. Long-standing practice-based approaches to learning have been used in many professions and trades. Indeed, admission to the trades and major professions (e.g. medicine, law, accountancy) can only be realised after completing extended periods of practice in authentic practice settings. However, the growing contemporary interest in using practice-based learning in more extensive contexts has arisen from concerns about the direct employability of graduates and the increasing focus on occupation-specific courses in both vocations and higher education. It is an especially urgent issue in an era of critical skill shortages, rapidly transforming work requirements and an aging workforce combined with a looming shortage of new workforce entrants. We must better understand how existing models of practice-based learning are enacted in order to identify how they can be applied to different kinds of employment and workplaces. The contributions to this volume explore ways in which learning through practice can be conceptualised, enacted, and appraised through ananalysis of the traditions, purposes, and processes that support this learningincluding curriculum models and pedagogic practices.
First volume to focus on the relationship between work, subjectivity and learning Addresses a growing field of interest in learning in and through practice Identifies models of practice-based learning that can be exercised within settings where professional practice occurs International contributions focussing on a range of workplace settings such as small and large business, new employees, older workers, self-employed workers
Inhalt
Series Foreword.- Series Editors' Foreword.- Contents.- Contributors.- 1. Learning through Practice.- 1.1 Learning through Practice.- 1.2 Emerging and Growing Interest in Learning through Practice.- 1.3 Approaches to and Models of Learning through Practice.- 1.4 Section One: Conceptual Premises of Learning through Practice.- 1.5 Section Two: Instances of Practice.- 2. Learning in Praxis, Learning for Praxis.- 2.1 Introduction.- 2.2 Praxis and Theory.- 2.2.1 A Historical Perspective.- 2.2.2 A Phenomenological Perspective .- 2.3 Learning at/for Work: A Case from Fish Culture.- 2.4 Coda.- 3. Knowledge, Working Practices, and Learning.- 3.1 My Perspective on Knowledge.- 3.2 Learning Trajectories.- 3.3 The Construction of Professional Practices in the Workplace.- 3.4 How do People Learn at Work?.- 3.5 Transfer of Knowledge Between Contexts.- 3.6 Factors Affecting Learning at Work.- 3.7 The Role of the Manager in Supporting Learning .- 4. The Practices of Learning through Occupations.- 4.1 Learning for and through Practice.- 4.2 Historical Conceptions of Learning through Practice and their Worth.- 4.3 Participatory Practice: A Conception of Learning through Practice.- 4.4 Individuals' Engagement, Agency, and Subjectivity.- Invitational Qualities.- 4.5 Intersubjectivity, Appropriation, and Extending Knowledge.- 4.6 Participation and Learning.- 5. Objectual Practice and Learning in Professional Work.- 5.1 Professional Work and Learning.- 5.2 New Contexts for Professional Work.- 5.3 Object-related Learning.- 5.4 The Study.- 5.5 Dynamics of Objectual Practice in Computer Engineering.- 5.5.1 Interplay between Explorative and Confirmative Practice.- 5.5.2 Linking Practitioners with Wider Knowledge Communities.- 5.5.3 Mediating Participation along Multiple Timescales.- 5.5.4 Facilitating Reflexive Learning.- 5.6 Concluding Remarks.- 6. Learning through and about Practice: A Lifeworld Perspective.- 6.1 A Need to Reexamine Learning through Practice.- 6.2 Historical Development ofLifeworld Perspective.- 6.3 Ways of Being in Workplace Contexts.- 6.4 Learning Ways of Being in Higher Education Contexts.- 6.5 Learning from a Lifeworld Perspective: Developing Ways of Being.- 7. Conceptualising Professional Identification as Flexibility, Stability and Ambivalence.- 7.1. Learning and Professional Identification as Life Politics.- 7.1.1 Flexibility Stability Ambivalence.- 7.2 Empirical Data.- 7.3 Becoming an Engineer or a Physician.- 7.3.1 Becoming an Engineer.- 7.3.2 Becoming a Physician.- 7.4 Being an Engineer or a Physician.- 7.4.1 Identification as a Flexible Strategy or a Permanent State .- 7.4.2 Engineer Confined to Workplace, Occupation, and Hours.- 7.4.3 Physician Profession Associated with Personality.- 7.5 Flexibility, Stability, and Ambivalence in Practice.- 7.6 Work, Life Politics, and Sustainable Life.- 7.6.1 Lifelong Qualification as Exclusion.- 7.6.2 Learning and Professional Identification as Life Politics.- 7.7 Concluding Remarks.- 8. Developing Vocational Practice and Social Capital in Jewellery.- 8.1 Introduction.- 8.2 Workplace and Practice-based Learning.- 8.3 The Development of Work Placement Scheme in the Jewellery Industry.- 8.4 The Development of Vocational Practice in the Jewellery Industry.- 8.5 Practice-based Learning: Epistemic and Pedagogic Issues.- 8.6 Conclusion.- 9. Guidance as an Interactional Accomplishment Practice-based Learning within the Swiss VET System.- 9.1 Introduction.- 9.2 Apprenticeship in the Swiss VET System.- 9.3 Researching Vocational Learning and Language-in-Interaction.- 9.4 An Interactional Approach to Guidance in the Workplace.- 9.4.1 Spontaneous Guidance.- 9.4.2 Requested Guidance.- 9.4.3 Distributed Guidance.- 9.4.4 Denied Guidance.- 9.5 Concluding Remarks and Practical Implications.- 10. Cooperative Education: Integrating Classroom and Workplace Learning.- 10.1 Cooperative Education as a Model of Practice-based Learning.- 10.2 The Development of Cooperative Education.- 10.3 The Organisational Milieu of Cooperative Education.- 10.4 Theorising Learning in Cooperative Education .- 10.5 Integrating Classroom and Workplace Learning.- 10.6 The Real Value of Cooperative Education.- 11. Individual Learning Paths of Employees in the Context of Social Networks.- 11.1 Introduction.- 11.2 Viewing the Organisation as a Network of Actors.- 11.3 Learning-Relevant Experiences Gained from the Work Network.- 11.3.1 How Actors Organise Work: A Cycle.- 11.3.2 Four Ideal Types of Work Process.- 11.3.3 Three Dimensions in Work-Network Structures.- 11.4 Learning-Relevant Experiences Gained in the Learning Network.- 11.4.1 Actors Organise Learning Networks: A Cycle.- 11.4.2 Actors Create Learning Programmes.- 11.4.3 Four Ideal Types of Learning Network.- 11.4.4 The Importance of Actors' Action Theories.- 11.5 How do Employees create their Individual Learning Paths?.- 11.6 Learning, Networks, Structure, and Agency.- 12. Apprenticeships: What happens in On-the-Job Training (OJT)?.- 12.1 Apprenticeship and Learning.- 12.1.1 Institutional History of Apprenticeship Programmes in the US.- 12.2 Methodology of this Study.- 12.3 The Physical Context of the Classroom as compared to the Field.- 12.4 On the Job: The Worksite itself as Resource for Learning.- 12.5 On the Job: Tools and Equipment as Resources for Learning.- 12.6 Learning Through Interaction without Master-Apprentice Relationships.- 12.7 Learning and the '…
Weitere Informationen
- Allgemeine Informationen
- GTIN 09789048139385
- Auflage 2010 edition
- Editor Stephen Billett
- Sprache Englisch
- Genre Pädagogik
- Lesemotiv Verstehen
- Anzahl Seiten 288
- Größe H243mm x B166mm x T25mm
- Jahr 2010
- EAN 9789048139385
- Format Fester Einband
- ISBN 978-90-481-3938-5
- Veröffentlichung 17.06.2010
- Titel Learning Through Practice
- Untertitel Models, Traditions, Orientations and Approaches
- Gewicht 592g
- Herausgeber Springer-Verlag GmbH