Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer
    ISBN: 9781402053597
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (297 p)
    Series Statement: Technical and Vocational Education and Training: Issues, Concerns and Prospects, 6 v.v. 6
    Parallel Title: Print version Work, Subjectivity and Learning
    DDC: 306.43
    Keywords: Electronic books
    Abstract: This book focuses on relations among subjectivity, work and learning that represent a point of convergence for diverse disciplinary traditions and practices. There are contributions from leading scholars in the field. They provide emerging perspectives that are elaborating the complex relations among subjectivity, work and learning, and circumstances in which they are played out
    Description / Table of Contents: Work, Subjectivity and Learning; Escaping/Becoming Subjects: Learning to Work the Boundaries in Boundaryless Work; Subjected Bodies, or Embodied Subjects: Subjectivity and Learning Safety at Work; Learning and Experience; Dressing Corporate Subjectivities: Learning What to Wear to the Bank; The Moving Subject: Shifting Work(ers) Across and Beyond Organisational Boundaries; Exploring Construction of Gendered Identities at Work; Epistemological Beliefs and Their Impact on Work, Subjectivity and Learning; Personal Agency and Epistemology at Work
    Description / Table of Contents: Developing Subjective Identities Through Collective ParticipationAction at a Distance: Governmentality, Subjectivity and Workplace Learning; Integrating Life, Work and Identity: Farm Women Transforming 'Self' through Personal Struggle and Conflict; Work, Subjectivity, and Learning in the Diaspora: Immigrant Women of Colour in White Academe; Workers, Subjectivity and Decent Work; Work, Subjectivity and Learning: Prospects and Issues
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    ISBN: 9783319290171 , 3319290177
    Language: English
    Pages: 0 cm x 0 cm, 0 g
    Edition: 1st ed. 2016
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 16
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als [Online-Ausgabe] Supporting Learning Across Working Life
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789048139378 , 1283085615 , 9781283085618
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XX, 220p, digital)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 7
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T.
    Keywords: Medical Education ; Education, Higher ; Education ; Education ; Medical Education ; Education, Higher
    Abstract: In higher education institutions across the globe, there is a growing interest in integrating classroom learning with experience in practice settings. This interest is the result of an increased emphasis on courses that prepare students for specific occupations in the hopes that upon graduation students will be job-ready. Developing Learning Professionals: Integrating Experiences in University and Practice Settings explores how the integration of student experiences across university and practice settings might best be used to produce college graduates who are adept, critical practitioners. To do so, it draws on the findings of a series of projects in Australia that investigated diverse aspects of work-related learning. Through these projects, a range of scholars and researchers consider different aspects of this educational initiative within the same national higher education context. They address pedagogic and curriculum practices, institutional arrangements and partnerships of varying kinds, and a consolidated set of perspectives.
    Description / Table of Contents: Series Editors Foreword; Preface; Series Introduction; Contents; Contributors; About the Authors; 1 Promoting Professional Learning: Integrating Experiences in University and Practice Settings; 1.1 New Educational Challenges for Professional Learning; 1.1.1 Projects Informing This Volume; 1.1.2 Conceptual Premises for Appraising the Worth of Integrating Experiences; 1.2 Integrating Practice and University Experiences: Curriculum and Pedagogy Practices; 1.3 Institutional Practices and Imperatives; References
    Description / Table of Contents: 2 Integrating Experiences in Workplace and University Settings: A Conceptual Perspective2.1 Educational Purposes for Integrating Experiences in University and Practice Settings; 2.1.1 Conceptual, Procedural, Dispositional Knowledge: Canonical Forms and Situational Versus Personal Attributes; 2.1.2 Agency of Learners; 2.2 Conceptions of Contributions from Both Settings: Beyond the Theory-Practice Divide; 2.2.1 Constituting Integration; 2.2.2 Three Accounts of Integrations; 2.3 Towards Effective Integration: Pedagogy and Curriculum; 2.3.1 Considerations for Curriculum
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.3.2 Considerations for PedagogyReferences; Part I Integrating Practice and University Experiences: Curriculum and Pedagogy Practices; 3 Preparing Nurses and Engaging Preceptors; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Preceptorship; 3.3 Creating an Environment That Supports Learning Opportunities; 3.3.1 LearningA Reciprocal Process; 3.3.2 Recognising the Uniqueness of the Individual; 3.4 Enhancing Learning Opportunities and Engagement; 3.5 Generational Tensions; 3.6 Strategies for Developing a Learning Partnership; 3.7 Promoting Professional Learning at Work; References
    Description / Table of Contents: 4 Targeted Preparation for Clinical Practice4.1 Introduction; 4.2 Background; Box 4.1 Year 3 students tips for transition to clinical education; 4.3 Lost in Transition; 4.3.1 What Was Enacted; 4.4 Research Methods; 4.4.1 Research Design; Box 4.2 Focus group one questions (immediately following the transition programme); 4.4.1.1 Outcome Measures; 4.4.1.2 Data Analysis; 4.5 Results and Discussion; 4.5.1 Themes from Qualitative Data Analysis; 4.5.1.1 Theme 1: Differences in Intended, Enacted, and Experienced Curriculum; 4.5.1.2 Theme 2: Authenticity as the Driver for Learning
    Description / Table of Contents: 4.5.1.3 Theme 3: Facilitating Transition: Engagement with Canonical and Heuristic Knowledge4.6 Conclusion and Recommendations; References; 5 Optimising the Follow-through Experience for Midwifery Learning; 5.1 Follow-through Experiences: Pedagogic and Curriculum Considerations; 5.2 Midwifery and the Follow-through Experiences; 5.3 Intended Follow-through Experience Curriculum; 5.4 Developing Learning Professionals; 5.5 Conceptual Midwifery Knowledge; 5.6 Procedural Knowledge; 5.7 Dispositional Knowledge; 5.8 Hidden Curriculum; 5.9 A Conceptual Model for the Follow-through Experience
    Description / Table of Contents: 5.9.1 Before the Follow-through Experience
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    ISBN: 9789401786942
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIV, 302 p. 9 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: Lifelong Learning Book Series 20
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Promoting, assessing, recognizing and certifying lifelong learning
    Keywords: Educational tests and measurements ; Adult education ; Education ; Education ; Educational tests and measurements ; Adult education ; Lebenslanges Lernen ; Berufsausbildung ; Weiterbildung
    Abstract: This book offers an international perspective on the growing interest worldwide in lifelong learning, particularly as it relates to learning beyond compulsory education and initial occupational preparation: across working life. Much of this interest is driven by key social and economic imperatives associated with the changing requirements of work and working life, the transformation of many occupations and lengthening working lives. The concerns in lifelong learning are also associated with individuals being able to engage in learning about cultural and social topics and practices that they had not so far. It is important to understand how this learning can be assessed, recognized and certified. Many in workforces across the world learn much of the knowledge that is required to maintain their employability through that work. Yet, that learning and that competency remains without recognition and certification while this could be particularly helpful for individuals seeking to sustain their employability or to extend their work into new occupations or workplaces. The first section of this book sets out the overall project and outlines the key concepts and issues. It illustrates why there is a need for promoting and recognizing lifelong learning and explains some of the terminology, concepts and key considerations. The second section informs about a range of policies and practices that are currently being deployed or have been deployed across a range of countries within Europe, Scandinavia and Asia. The last section comprises of contributions emphasizing the ways in which the assessment of workers learning takes place in different occupational contexts and different cultural contexts. The final chapter outlines how a systemic approach to recognizing lifelong learning might progress for a country which is promoting a continuing education and training system largely outside of tertiary education institutions
    Description / Table of Contents: About the Editors; Preface; Acknowledgements; Contents; Part I: Promoting and Recognising Lifelong Learning: Key Concepts, Practices and Emerging and Perennial Problems; Chapter 1: Promoting and Recognising Lifelong Learning: Introduction; 1.1 Lifelong Learning and Employability; 1.2 Part I-Promoting and Recognising Lifelong Learning: Key Concepts, Practices and Emerging and Perennial Problems; 1.3 Part II-Promoting Lifelong Learning for Economic, Social and Cultural Purposes; 1.4 Part III-Recognising and Certifying Lifelong Learning: Policies and Practices; References
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 2: Conceptualising Lifelong Learning in Contemporary Times2.1 Learning Across Working Lives; 2.2 Lifelong Learning: Personal Facts; 2.3 Purposes and Processes of Lifelong Learning; 2.4 Interests in Lifelong Learning and Their Reconciliation; 2.5 Lifelong Education; 2.6 A Framework for Lifelong Learning and Education; References; Chapter 3: New Skills for New Jobs: Work Agency as a Necessary Condition for Successful Lifelong Learning; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Work Agency; 3.3 Lifelong Learning and Its Interdependence with Work Agency; 3.4 Research Agenda; 3.4.1 Large-Scale Approach
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.4.2 Cognitive Approach3.4.3 Relational Approach; 3.4.4 Ethnographic Approach; 3.5 Summary; References; Part II: Promoting Lifelong Learning for Economic, Social and Cultural Purposes; Chapter 4: Evaluating Informal Learning in the Workplace; 4.1 Evaluating Informal Learning in the Workplace; 4.2 Comparing Sociocultural and Cognitive Perspectives on Workplace Learning; 4.3 Marsick and Watkins' Theory of Informal and Incidental Learning; 4.4 Communities of Practice in Public Administration in Spain; 4.5 Dilemmas in Assessing Informal Learning
    Description / Table of Contents: 4.6 Implications for Credentialing Informal and Incidental LearningReferences; Chapter 5: Recognising Learning and Development in the Transaction of Personal Work Practices; 5.1 Work-Learning Perspectives; 5.2 Human Agency; 5.3 Transaction; 5.4 Exploring Workers' Personal Practices; 5.5 Transacting Identity Through Forms of Social Engagement; 5.6 Transacting Goals as Personal Aspirations and Shared Purposes; 5.7 Transacting the Material as Tools and Procedures; 5.8 Recognising Learning Through the Transactions of Work Practice; References
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 6: Understanding Work-Related Learning: The Role of Job Characteristics and the Use of Different Sources of Learning6.1 Introduction; 6.1.1 Job Characteristics; 6.1.2 Work-Related Learning; 6.1.3 Learning Activities During Internships; 6.2 The Present Study; 6.3 Method; 6.4 Results; 6.4.1 Differences in Learning During Internships; 6.5 Conclusions and Discussion; References; Chapter 7: Experiential Learning: A New Higher Education Requiring New Pedagogic Skills; 7.1 Introduction and Background; 7.2 Current Context; 7.3 Tensions Experienced; 7.4 Solutions Adopted; 7.5 Benefits Reported
    Description / Table of Contents: 7.6 Reconciling Approaches to the Higher Education Curriculum
    Description / Table of Contents: PrefaceAcknowledgements -- Section 1: Promoting and recognising lifelong learning: Key concepts, practices and emerging and perennial problems -- Chapter 1: Promoting and recognising lifelong learning: Introduction; Timo Halttunen and Mari Koivisto (University of Turku, Finland), and Stephen Billett (Griffith University, Australia) -- Chapter 2 : Conceptualising lifelong learning and its recognition in contemporary times; Stephen Billett (Griffith University, Australia -- Chapter 3: New skills for new jobs: Work agency as a necessary condition for successful lifelong learning; Christian Harteis and Michael Goller (University of Paderborn, Germany) -- Section 2: Promoting lifelong learning for economic, social and cultural purposes -- Chapter 4: Evaluating informal learning in the workplace; Karen E. Watkins (The University of Georgia, USA), Victoria J. Marsick (Columbia University, USA) and Miren Fernández de Álava (Autonomous University of Barcelona, Spain) -- Chapter 5: Recognising learning and development in the transaction of personal work practices; Raymond Smith (Griffith University, Australia) -- Chapter 6: Understanding work-related learning: The role of job characteristics and the use of different sources of learning; David Gijbels, Vincent Donche and Piet Van den Bossche (University of Antwerp, Belgium), and Ingrid Ilsbroux and Eva Sammels (University of Leuven, Belgium) -- Chapter 7: Experiential learning: A new higher education requiring new pedagogic skills; Anita Walsh (University of London, UK) -- Chapter 8: How expertise is created in emerging professional fields: Tuire Palonen and Erno Lehtinen (University of Turku, Finland), and Henny P. A. Boshuizen (Open Universiteit in the Netherlands) -- Chapter 9: Continuing education and training at work; Sarojni Choy, Ray Smith and Ann Kelly (Griffith University, Australia) -- Chapter 10: Lifelong learning policies and practices in Singapore: Tensions and challenges; Helen Bound, Magdalene Lin and Peter Rushbrook (Institute for Adult Learning, Singapore) -- Section 3: Recognising and certifying lifelong learning: Policies and practices -- Chapter 11: Professionalisation of supervisors and RPL; Timo Halttunen and Mari Koivisto (University of Turku, Finland) -- Chapter 12: Securing assessors’ professionalism: Meeting assessor requirements for the purpose of performing high-quality (RPL) assessments; Antoinette van Berkel (Amsterdam University of Applied Sciences, the Netherlands) -- Chapter 13: Problems and possibilities in recognition of prior learning: A critical social theory perspective; Fredrik Sandberg (Linköping University, Sweden) -- Chapter 14: Changing RPL & HRD discourses: practitioner perspectives; Anne Murphy (Dublin Institute of Technology, Ireland), Oran Doherty (Letterkenny Institute of Technology, Ireland), and Kate Collins (University College Dublin, Ireland) -- Chapter 15: French approaches to Accreditation of Prior Learning: practices and research; Vanessa Remery (University of Geneva, Switzerland) and Vincent Merle (Conservatoire national des arts et métiers, CNAM, France) -- Chapter 16: Recognising and certifying workers’ knowledge: Policies, frameworks and practices in prospect: Perspectives from two countries; Stephen Billett (Griffith University, Australia) and Helen Bound and Magdalene Lin (Institute for Adult Learning, Singapore) -- Index.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789048139392
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XX, 288p, digital)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 1
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Learning through practice
    RVK:
    Keywords: Education, Higher ; Adult education ; Education ; Education ; Education, Higher ; Adult education ; Lerntechnik ; Praxisbezug
    Abstract: Practice-based learning the kind of education that comes from experiencing real work in real situations has 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 an analysis of the traditions, purposes, and processes that support this learning including curriculum models and pedagogic practices.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Science+Business Media B.V
    ISBN: 9789400719545
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XV, 266p, digital)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Billett, Stephen Vocational education
    RVK:
    Keywords: Education ; Education ; Education ; Vocational education ; Berufsbildung ; Bildungswesen ; Berufsausbildung ; Berufsbildungssystem
    Abstract: No description available.
    Abstract: This book discusses what constitutes vocational education as well as its key purposes, objects, formation and practices. In short, it seeks to outline and elaborate the nature of the project of vocational education. It addresses a significant gap in the available literature by providing a single text that elaborates the scope and diversity of the sector, its key objectives (i.e. vocations and occupations), its formation and development as an education sector, and the scope of its purposes and considerations in the curriculum. The volume achieves these objectives by discussing and defining the
    Description / Table of Contents: Preface; Reference; Acknowledgements; Contents; 1 Vocational Education: A Field and Sector of Education; Vocational Education; Vocational Education: A Diverse Field of Education; Diversities and Vocational Education; Vocational Education: Key Concepts and Conceptual Bases; Vocational Education: Both a Field of Education and a Sector; Vocations and Occupations as Concepts; Constructivism: Personal and Social Perspectives; Organisation and Contributions of the Chapters; 2 Positioning Vocational Education; Positioning Vocational Education
    Description / Table of Contents: Distinctiveness and Diversity Within Vocational EducationFocuses for Vocational Education; Specificity of Learning Outcomes; Key Focuses; Diverse Traditions and Institutions of Vocational Education; Consistency Within Diversity; Standing of Vocational Education; Premises; All Educational Provision Should Aim to Be Vocational; Vocational Education Is a Crucial Educational Field; Little Distinction Between Higher and Vocational Education; Both General and Specific Educational Provisions Are Salient; Socially Privileged 'Others' Influence the Standing of Occupations and Vocational Education
    Description / Table of Contents: Problems and Limitations with the Vocational Education SectorPositioning of Vocational Education; 3 Vocations; Defining Vocations; Constituting and Defining Vocations; Vocations: Origins and Forms; Vocations: Personal and Social Dimensions; The Valuing of Vocations; Imperatives of Brute Facts; Limits of the Personal as Vocation; Constituting Vocations; Vocations; 4 Occupations; Occupations; Occupations as Paid Work; The Worth of Occupations; From 'Called to' to 'Calling for'; Occupations as Callings; Professions Versus Other Occupations; Conceptions of Occupations and Education
    Description / Table of Contents: 5 Development of Vocational Education Systems and FieldsFormation of Vocational Education Systems; The Impact of Modernism; The Formation of National Vocational Education Systems; Academic Perspectives and Sentiments; The Role and Power of Bureaucracies; The Development and Ordering of Vocational Education; 6 Purposes of Vocational Education; Vocational Education Purposes; Educational Purposes; The Purposes for Vocational Education; Vocational Education: Purposes and Perspectives; Cultural Reproduction, Remaking and Transformation; Continuity and Transformation of Occupational Practice
    Description / Table of Contents: Economic and Social Efficiency and EffectivenessDeveloping Capacities Required for Effective Work; Developing Enterprises' Capacities for Continuity; Societal Continuity and Transformation; Securing the Range of Occupational Competence That Particular Societies Need; Developing the Capacity to Secure Employment and Resist Unemployment; Individual Fitness and Work Readiness; Individual Progression; Supporting Development for and Across Working Life; Assisting Work Transitions; Assisting the Development of Learners Whose Needs and Capacities Transform; Personal Emancipation and Progression
    Description / Table of Contents: Purposes of Vocational Education
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    ISBN: 9789400741980 , 1280996781 , 9781280996788
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XII, 274 p. 5 illus, digital)
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. Experience of school transitions
    RVK:
    Keywords: Education, Higher ; Education ; Education ; Education, Higher ; Schule ; Schulabgänger ; Berufsausbildung ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Schulübergang
    Abstract: Leaving school, whether to move on to training, work or education, is a fundamental rite of passage the world over. This volume draws on a wealth of international sources and studies in its analysis of the transitions young students make as they move on from their secondary schooling. It identifies how these transitions are planned for by policymakers, enacted by school staff and engaged with by students themselves. With data from a range of nations with advanced industrial economies, the book delineates how the policies relating to these transitions need to be conceived and implemented, how the transitions themselves are negotiated by young people, and how they might be shaped to meet the varied needs of the students they are designed to help. The authors argue that the relationship, often complex, between what schools provide in the way of preparation, and the ways in which students take up what is on offer, is the crucial nexus for understanding the experience of transitions by young people, and for enhancing that experience. With a host of case studies of transition policies themselves, as well as evaluative data on how they were received by the school leavers whom they were designed for, this valuable addition to the educational literature deserves to be read by all those with roles in preparing the young for their journey into a complex adult world full of pitfalls as well as opportunity.
    Description / Table of Contents: Experience of School Transitions; Preface; References; Contents; Part I: School Transitions: Overview, Policy Orientations and Theorisations; Chapter 1: Experiences of School Transitions: Policies, Practice and Participants; Productive Transitions from Schooling; Conceptualising School Transitions as Affordances and Engagement; Bases of Affordances and Engagement; Students' Perceptions of School and Community Affordances and Personal Efforts in Transitions; School Affordances; Community Engagement; Personal Action and Agency
    Description / Table of Contents: Interrelationship Amongst School Affordances, Community Engagement and Student ActionReferences; Chapter 2: Reconciling the System World with the Life Worlds of Young Adults: Where Next for Youth Transition Policies?; Reconciling Life and Personal Worlds; Transition Behaviours and Employment Outcomes; Agency and Feelings of Control in Human Lives; The Shaping of Youth Transitions: Three Dimensions; Bounded Agency: Focusing on How Individual Agency Can Be Supported Without Losing Sight of the Structuring Effects of Contexts; 'Life Chances' and Beliefs About Opportunity
    Description / Table of Contents: Experiencing Working Life and Learning at WorkPolicy Implications; Summary and Conclusions; References; Chapter 3: Bridging School and Work: A Person-in-Context Model for Enabling Resilience in At-Risk Youth; Youth, Education, and Employment; School-to-Work Transition; At-Risk Youth and Resilience; Constructing the Model; Person-in-Context Model; Individual Domain; Social-Cultural Domain; Economic-Political Domain; Intersections of Domains; Utility of the Model; References; Part II: Imperatives for and Practices of Transitions: International Perspectives
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 4: The American Shortcut to VET: Global Policy Borrowing for the Post-16 Educational ArenaIntroduction: College-for-All?; Career Pathways; The Board Exam Model; The OECD and Policy Borrowing; Learning for Jobs; Concluding Remarks; References; Chapter 5: Access, Coping and Relevance of Education in Youth Transitions: The German Transition System Between Labour Society and Knowledge Society; Introduction; Standing on the Shoulders of Giants? The Heritage of Luther and Bismarck in Contemporary German Youth Transitions; Key Problem Areas: Unemployed Youth and Lack of Qualified Labour
    Description / Table of Contents: Repairing or Reforming? Policy Trends and DiscoursesYouth Transitions in Germany in Comparison: The Model of Transition Regimes; Conclusions: Pedagogical and Political Dilemmas; References; Chapter 6: Making the Transition to Post-school Life: The Canadian Situation; Introduction; Labour Market and Education Contexts; School-Work Transition Policy Programs in Canada; At-Risk Students: Staying at School; Youth Apprenticeships: Helping Young People and Addressing Pressing Labour Shortages; Widening Participation in Higher Education
    Description / Table of Contents: Why Is the Transition to Post-school Life So Persistently Problematic?
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    ISBN: 9789401795029
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (IX, 189 p. 8 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 10
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Education, Higher ; Education ; Education ; Education, Higher
    Abstract: This book discusses and elaborates on how practice-based pedagogy can effectively co-exist with the practices and interests of academia. In doing so, it lays bare the tensions between learning in workplace practices and the cultures that contribute to the complex relationships required for successful implementation in higher education. It does so in an attempt to resolve an approach within which university students may enjoy the learning inherent in the practice of work whilst pursuing robust higher education qualifications. The contributions here variously explore the epistemologies, structures, politics, histories and rituals that both support and constrain opportunity and success in students’ experiences. They illuminate the issues, practices and factors that shape the processes and outcome of educational efforts to integrate experiences in both practice and educational settings, each of which has their own distinct cultures, practice within their communities
    Description / Table of Contents: Series Editors' Foreword; Contents; Contributors; Chapter-1; Practice-Based Learning in Higher Education: Jostling Cultures; Practice-Based Learning and Higher Education; The Provision of Practice-Based Experiences in Higher Education; Negotiating Amongst and Jostling Cultures; Transforming Institutional and Teacher Practices; Contributions to These Arguments; References; Chapter-2; The Practices of Using and Integrating Practice-Based Learning in Higher Education; Practice Based Experiences and Higher Education; The Learning of Occupations Within Practice Settings
    Description / Table of Contents: Constituting Effective Educational Provisions and PracticesTowards an Effective Integration of Practice Experiences; Providing Practice-Based Experiences; Pedagogic Practices for Integrating Practice Experiences Within Higher Education Courses; The Practices of Practice-Based Education; References; Chapter-3; Knowledge Claims and Values in Higher Education; Practice-Based Learning and Epistemological Difference; Knowledge Claims in the 'Practice Turn'; Traditions, Disciplines and Dissonance; Knowledge Claims and Confluence; Conclusions; References; Chapter-4
    Description / Table of Contents: Developing Critical Moral Agency Through Workplace EngagementPower, Agency and Learning in the Workplace; The Agency of the Emerging Professional; An Exploration of Moral Agency in Engineering and Science Students; Evolving Agentic Practice; Educating for Critical Moral Agency; Conclusion; References; Chapter-5; Standards and Standardization; Introduction; Critical discourse analysis; Standards and standardization ; The Benefits and Challenges of Standardization; A critique of the standards; Addressing the Questions; Embracing the opportunities ; Summary; Reference; Chapter-6
    Description / Table of Contents: Professional Standards in Curriculum Design: A Socio-Technical Analysis of Nursing Competency StandardsIntroduction; Literature Review; Professional Standards Can Work as a Boundary Object; Curriculum Design as Translation Work ; Legitimation of Nursing Knowledge Through Assemblages of Competence: A Theory-Methods Package; Discussion; Limitations; Conclusion; References; Chapter-7; The Role of Epistemology in Practice-Based Learning: The Case of Artifacts; The Artefact, the Discipline, the Academic and the Institution; Why Bourdieu and de Certeau? ; Field, Capital and Habitus; Field; Habitus
    Description / Table of Contents: (Habitus X Capital) + Field = PracticeDe Certeau and Practice; Negotiating Fields and Habitus in Pursuit of Excellent Practice; References; Chapter-8; E-learning as Organizing Practice in Higher Education; Introduction; Education as Organization and Practice; Practice, Technology and Organizing Education; E-learning Practice and Organizing in Higher Education ; The Brazilian E-Learning Models in Higher Education; Analysing E-learning Models in Higher Education as Organizing Practices by Brazilian Experience; Learning the E-learning "Times" ; The Necessity of Planning
    Description / Table of Contents: The Learning of VLE Logic and Functioning
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    ISBN: 9783319186696
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (VIII, 378 p. 15 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 12
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Series Statement: Springer eBook Collection
    Series Statement: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Education, Higher ; Adult education ; Education
    Abstract: This book generates a comprehensive account of ways in which practice-based learning has been conceptualized in the Francophone context. Learning for occupations, and the educational and practice-based experiences supporting it are the subject of increased interest and attention globally. Governments, professional bodies, workplaces and workers are now looking for experiences that support the initial and ongoing development of occupational capacities. Consequently, more attention is being given to workplaces as sites for this learning. This focus on learning through work has long been emphasised in the Francophone world, which has developed distinct traditions and conceptions of associations between work and learning. These include ergonomics and professional didactics. Yet, whilst being accepted and of long standing in the Francophone world, these conceptions and traditions, and the practices supporting them are little known about or understood in the Anglophone world, which is the dominant medium for scientific and educational discussion. This book addresses this problem through drawing on accounts from France, Switzerland and Canada that make accessible and elaborate these traditions, conceptions and practices through examples of their applications to occupationally related learning. These accounts offer variations and culturally-specific developments of these traditions, but collectively emphasize a preoccupation with how both work and learning need to be understood through situated considerations of persons enacting their work practice. In this way, they offer noteworthy and worthwhile contributions to contemporary global considerations of learning through work. "This book is most important for our community, not only for the workplace learning community, but for the whole field of educational, psychological and pedagogical science." Professor Hans Gruber, EARLI President from 2015 to 2017〈
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer
    ISBN: 9789401772303
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIX, 258 p, online resource)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 13
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Series Statement: Springer eBook Collection
    Series Statement: Humanities, Social Sciences and Law
    Parallel Title: Druckausg.
    Keywords: Education, Higher ; Education
    Abstract: This book advances understandings about and practices for effectively integrating practice-based (e.g. workplace) experiences in higher education programs. This issue is becoming of increasing salient because higher education programs globally are increasingly focussing on preparing students for specific occupations. Such imperatives are reflected in the cooperative education movement in North America, the foundation degree programs of the United Kingdom, the work integrated learning approach within Australian higher education and initiatives in a range of other countries. There are clear and growing expectations that graduates from such should be able to move smoothly into being effective in their occupational practice. These expectations rise from the imperatives and interest of government, employers, community and students themselves. The book achieves a number of important goals. Firstly, it identifies and delineates the educational worth of students and engagement in practice-based experiences and their integration within their programs of study. Secondly, it advances conceptions of the integration of such experiences that is essential to inform how these programs might be enacted. Thirdly, drawing on the findings of two teaching fellowships, it proposed bases and propositions for how experiences in higher education programs might be organised and augmented to support effective learning. Fourthly pedagogic practices seen to be effective in maximising the learning from those practice experiences and integrating them within the curriculum are identified and discussed. Fifthly, a particular focus is given to students’ personal epistemologies and how these might be developed and directed towards supporting effective learning within practice settings and the integration of that learning in their university programs
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. More information can be found here...