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  • 1
    ISBN: 9789401789028
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XXI, 1383 p. 100 illus, online resource)
    Series Statement: Springer International Handbooks of Education
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. International handbook of research in professional and practice-based learning
    Keywords: Adult education ; Education ; Education ; Adult education
    Abstract: The International Handbook of Research in Professional and Practice-based Learning discusses what constitutes professionalism, examines the concepts and practices of professional and practice-based learning, including associated research traditions and educational provisions. It also explores professional learning in institutions of higher and vocational education as well the practice settings where professionals work and learn, focusing on both initial and ongoing development and how that learning is assessed. The Handbook features research from expert contributors in education, studies of the professions, and accounts of research methodologies from a range of informing disciplines. It is organized in two parts. The first part sets out conceptions of professionalism at work, how professions, work and learning can be understood, and examines the kinds of institutional practices organized for developing occupational capacities. The second part focuses on procedural issues associated with learning for and through professional practice, and how assessment of professional capacities might progress. The key premise of this Handbook is that during both initial and ongoing professional development, individual learning processes are influenced and shaped through their professional environment and practices. Moreover, in turn, the practice and processes of learning through practice are shaped by their development, all of which are required to be understood through a range of research orientations, methods and findings. This Handbook will appeal to academics working in fields of professional practice, including those who are concerned about developing these capacities in their students. In addition, students and research students will also find this Handbook a key reference resource to the field
    Description / Table of Contents: Acknowledgements; Members of Editorial Board; Reviewers of Contributions; Contents; Contributors; Introduction; Volume 1 - Scientific and Institutional Framework; Volume 2 - Learning, Education and Assessment in and for the Professions; Part I: Professions and Professional Practice; Chapter 1: Professionalism, Profession and Professional Conduct: Towards a Basic Logical and Ethical Geography; 1.1 Diverse Senses of 'Profession' and 'Professional'; 1.2 Criteria of 'Profession' and/or Professionalism; 1.3 The Moral Basis of Profession and Normative Professionalism
    Description / Table of Contents: 1.4 Extended and Restricted Professionalism1.5 Professional 'Phronesis'; References; Chapter 2: The Concept of Professionalism: Professional Work, Professional Practice and Learning; 2.1 Defining the Field and Clarifying Concepts; 2.2 Professionalism : History and Current Developments; 2.2.1 Early Phase: Professionalism as a Normative Value; 2.2.2 Critical Phase: Professionalism as Ideology; 2.2.3 Third Phase: Professionalism as a Discourse; 2.3 A New Professionalism? Changes and Continuities; 2.3.1 Consequence and Challenges; 2.3.2 Opportunities
    Description / Table of Contents: 2.4 Policy Relevance, Assessment and EvaluationReferences; Chapter 3: Moral Aspects of Professions and Professional Practice; 3.1 Introduction; 3.2 Moral Problems and Solutions in the Context of Professional Practice; 3.2.1 Moral Problems at Work; 3.2.2 A Taxonomy of Types of Situations; 3.2.3 A Neo-Kohlbergian Taxonomy of Moral Stages; 3.3 Moral Functioning and Situational Adjustment; 3.3.1 Situation-Specific Adaptation; 3.3.2 Inferences and the Explanation of Situational Differentiation and Adaptation; 3.3.3 The Moral Self and Moral Functioning
    Description / Table of Contents: 3.4 Implications for Professional Practice and Vocational Education and TrainingReferences; Chapter 4: Professional Work and Knowledge; 4.1 Introduction; 4.1.1 Aims of the Chapter: Harmonising Multiple Views on Professional Knowledge to Illuminate Persistent Problems in Professional Education; 4.1.2 Structure of the Chapter; 4.2 Professional Work and Workplaces; 4.3 What Is Knowledge?; 4.3.1 Knowledge, Broadly Understood; 4.4 Public, Personal and Organisational Knowledge; 4.4.1 Public Knowledge; 4.4.2 Personal Knowledge; 4.4.3 Organisational Knowledge
    Description / Table of Contents: 4.5 Knowledge and Professional Action: Foundational Ideas4.5.1 Learning to Do and Learning to Understand; 4.5.2 Knowledge and Knowing; 4.5.3 Generic Thinking Skill and Professional Episteme; 4.6 Epistemic Fluency and Professional Knowledge: Tracing Four Epistemic Projects; 4.6.1 The Reflective-Rational Project: From Rational Knowledge to Reflective Practice to Rational Reflection; 4.6.2 The Reflective-Embodied Project: From Knowing to Being ; 4.6.3 The Relational Project: From Individualistic to Relational Expertise
    Description / Table of Contents: 4.6.4 The Knowledge Building Project: From Practice as Knowledge Transfer to Knowing as Epistemic Practice
    Description / Table of Contents: (A) Acknowledgments(B) Introduction -- Section 1. Professions and the workplace -- (C) Section Introduction -- (1) David Carr, Professionalism, profession and professional conduct: Towards a basic logical and ethical geography -- (2) Julia Evetts, The concept of professionalism: Professional work, professional practice and learning -- (3) Gerhard Minnameier, Moral aspects of professions and professional practice -- (4) Lina Markauskaite & Peter Goodyear, Professional work and knowledge -- (5) Martin Mulder, Conceptions of professional competence -- (6) Silvia Gherardi & Manuela Perrotta, Becoming a practitioner: Professional learning as a social practice -- (7) Jim Hordern, Productive systems of professional formation -- Section 2. Research paradigms of work and learning -- (D) Section Introduction -- (8) Erno Lehtinen, Kai Hakkarainen & Tuire Palonen, Understanding learning for the professions: How theories of learning explain coping with rapid change -- (9) Laurent Filliettaz, Understanding learning for work: Contributions from discourse and interaction analysis -- (10) Paul Gibbs, Research paradigms of practice, work and learning -- (11) Gloria Dall'Alba & Jörgen Sandberg, A phenomenological perspective on researching work and learning -- (12) Mark Greenlee, The neuronal base of perceptual learning and skill acquisition -- (13) Eva Kyndt & Patrick Onghena, Hierarchical Linear Models for research on professional learning: Relevance and implications -- (14) Catherine Hasse, The anthropological paradigm of practice-based learning -- Section 3. Educational systems (learning for professions) -- (E) Section Introduction -- (15) Peter Sloane, Professional education between school and practice settings: The German dual system as an example -- (16) Bärbel Fürstenau, Matthias Pilz, & Philipp Gonon, The dual system of vocational education and training in Germany - what can be learnt about education for (other) professions -- (17) Madeleine Abrandt Dahlgren, Tone Dyrdal Solbrekke, Berit Karseth, & Sofia Nyström, From university to professional practice: Students as journeymen between cultures of education and work -- (18) Stephen Billett & Sarojni Choy, Integrating professional learning experiences across university and practice settings -- (19) Päivi Tynjälä & Jennifer M. Newton, Transitions to working life: securing professional competence -- (20) Elizabeth Katherine Molloy, Louise Greenstock, Patrick Fiddes, Catriona Fraser, & Peter Brooks, Interprofessional education in the health workplace -- (21) Tim Dornan & Pim W. Teunissen, Medical education -- (22) Ming Fai Pang, A phenomenographic way of seeing and developing professional learning -- (23) Monika Nerland & Karen Jensen, Changing cultures of knowledge and professional learning -- Section 4. Professional learning and education (learning in professions) -- (F) Section Introduction -- (24) Anneli Eteläpelto, Katja Vähäsantanen, Päivi Hökkä, & Susanna Paloniemi, Identity and agency in professional learning -- (25) Jan Breckwoldt, Hans Gruber, & Andreas Wittmann, Simulation learning -- (26) Christian Harteis & Johannes Bauer, Learning from errors at work -- (27) Stephen Billett & Raymond Smith, Learning in the circumstances of professional practice -- (28) Geoffrey Gowlland, Apprenticeship as a model for learning in and through professional practice -- (29) Britta Herbig & Andreas Müller, Implicit knowledge and work performance -- (30) Eugene Sadler-Smith, Intuition in professional and practice-based learning -- (31) Bente Elkjaer & Ulrik Brandi, An organisational perspective on professionals' learning -- (32) Morten Sommer, Professional learning in the ambulance service -- (33) Stephen Billett, Mimetic learning at work: Learning through and across professional working lives -- Section 5. Implementing and supporting professional learning -- (G) Section Introduction -- (34) Anton Havnes & Jens-Christian Smeby, Professional development and the professions -- (35) P. Robert-Jan Simons & Manon C. P. Ruijters, The real professional is a learning professional -- (36) Filip Dochy, David Gijbels, Elisabeth Raes, & Eva Kyndt, Team learning in education and professional organisations -- (37) Victoria Marsick, Andrew K. Shiotani, & Martha A. Gephart, Teams, communities of practice, and knowledge networks as locations for learning professional practice -- (38) Rob F. Poell & Ferd J. van der Krogt, The role of Human Resource Development in organizational change: Professional development strategies of employees, managers and HRD practicioners -- (39) Lillian Turner de Tormes Eby, B. Lindsay Brown, & Kerrin George, Mentoring as a strategy for facilitating learning: Protégé and mentor perspectives -- (40) James Avis & Kevin Orr, The new professionalism: An exploration of vocational education and training teachers -- (41) Tarja Irene Tikkanen & Stephen Billett, Older professionals, learning and practice -- (42) Per-Erik Elleström & Per Nilsen, Promoting practice-based innovation through learning at work -- (43) Allison Littlejohn & Anoush Margaryan, Technology enhanced professional learning -- Section 6. Evaluating and assessing professional learning -- (H) Section Introduction -- (44) Thomas R. Guskey, Evaluating professional learning -- (45) Dineke E. H. Tigelaar & Cees P. M. van der Vleuten, Assessment of professional competence.-  (46) Tara J. Fenwick, Assessment of professional learning in practice -- (47) Patrick Griffin, Esther Care, Judith Crigan, Pamela Robertson, Zhonghua Zhang, & Alejandra Arratia-Martinez, The influence of evidence-based decisions by collaborative teacher teams on student achievement -- (48) Frank Achtenhagen & Esther Winter, Large-scale assessment of vocational education and training.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    URL: Cover
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  • 2
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Dordrecht : Springer Netherlands
    ISBN: 9789048139415
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIII, 265p. 32 illus, digital)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 6
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Buchausg. u.d.T. Human fallibility
    RVK:
    Keywords: Applied psychology ; Education ; Education ; Applied psychology ; Errors ; Fallibility ; Fehler ; Lernpsychologie
    Abstract: Christian Harteis
    Abstract: A curious ambiguity surrounds errors in professional working contexts: they must be avoided in case they lead to adverse (and potentially disastrous) results, yet they also hold the key to improving our knowledge and procedures. In a further irony, it seems that a prerequisite for circumventing errors is our remaining open to their potential occurrence and learning from them when they do happen. This volume, the first to integrate interdisciplinary perspectives on learning from errors at work, presents theoretical concepts and empirical evidence in an attempt to establish under what conditions professionals deal with errors at work productively in other words, learn the lessons they contain. By drawing upon and combining cognitive and action-oriented approaches to human error with theories of adult, professional, and workplace learning this book provides valuable insights which can be applied by workers and professionals. It includes systematic theoretical frameworks for explaining learning from errors in daily working life, methodologies and research instruments that facilitate the measurement of that learning, and empirical studies that investigate relevant determinants of learning from errors in different professions. Written by an international group of distinguished researchers from various disciplines, the chapters paint a comprehensive picture of the current state of the art in research on human fallibility and (learning from) errors at work.
    Description / Table of Contents: Human Fallibility; Series Editors' Foreword; Contents; Contributors; Chapter 1: The Ambiguity of Errors for Work and Learning: Introduction to the Volume; Perspectives on Errors at Work and Learning from Them; Overview of the Book; Scope and Audience; Organisation and Content; Part A: Errors, Their Learning Potential, and the Processes of Learning from Errors; Part B: Methodological Strategies; Part C: Learning from Errors in the Professions; Part D: Enabling Learning from Errors; References; Part I: Errors, Their Learning Potential, and the Processes of Learning from Errors
    Description / Table of Contents: Chapter 2: Errors and Learning from Errors at WorkErrors, Learning and Work; Performance and Errors at Work: The Social Dimension; Performance and Errors at Work: The Personal Dimension; Relational Basis for Understanding What Constitutes Errors at Work and Human Fallibility; Situational; Cultural; Personal; Learning from and Through Errors at Work; Workplaces Affordances; Personal Bases; References; Chapter 3: Tracing Outcomes of Learning from Errors on the Level of Knowledge; Introduction; Processes, Prerequisites and Outcomes of Learning from Errors
    Description / Table of Contents: What Can Be Learnt from Errors? Existing Results and Open QuestionsKnowledge-Based Error Anticipation; Transfer of Lessons Learned from Errors; Counter-Productivity of the Results of Learning from Errors; Negative Knowledge as an Outcome of Learning from Errors; Theoretical Conception; Acquisition of Negative Knowledge; Representation of Negative Knowledge; Application of Negative Knowledge; Challenges for Research on Negative Knowledge; Researching Employees' Error-Related Knowledge: Conceptual and Methodological Conclusions
    Description / Table of Contents: Consider the Embeddedness of Negative Knowledge in Structures of Experiential KnowledgeConsider the Embeddedness of Error-Related Knowledge in a Particular Sociocultural Context; Comparatively Focus on Two Ways to Externalise Knowledge: Verbalisation and Application in Practical Tasks; References; Chapter 4: Towards a Theory of Negative Knowledge (NK): Almost-Mistakes as Drivers of Episodic Memory Amplification; Negative Knowledge: To Know What Is Wrong Helps in Understanding What Is Right; Almost-Mistakes/Nearby-Mistakes/Near-Misses: A New Learning Framework; Previous Research
    Description / Table of Contents: Negative Knowledge: A Remembering TaskNegativity in Itself: Some Anthropological Considerations; Applauding Mistakes or Almost-Mistakes: On the Necessity of Demythologizing the "Right" Mistake; Fostering the Error Culture Through Near-Miss in Firms; Discussion; References; Chapter 5: Professional Knowledge Is (Also) Knowledge About Errors; Knowledge Is Power; Complex Professional Activities Are Not Free from Errors; How Knowledge Is (Undesirably) Affected: Inert Knowledge - Problems of Knowledge Application; Using Errors and Ambiguities as Starting Point to Reconsider the Concept of Knowledge
    Description / Table of Contents: Implications for the Practice of Knowledge-Intensive Professions
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
    URL: Cover
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  • 3
    ISBN: 9783322808912
    Language: German
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (340 S. 16 Abb)
    Edition: 1st ed. 2004
    Parallel Title: Printed edition
    DDC: 306.43
    Keywords: Educational sociology  ; Education and sociology ; Education ; Sociology
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  • 4
    ISBN: 9783322808912
    Language: German
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (340 S. 16 Abb)
    Series Statement: Springer eBook Collection
    Series Statement: Humanities, Social Science
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als
    DDC: 370
    Keywords: Social sciences ; Education and sociology. ; Educational sociology . ; Education. ; Sociology.
    Abstract: In diesem Buch soll aufgezeigt werde, dass und wie erziehungswissenschaftliche Fragestellungen und Forschungsergebnisse zur Beschreibung, Erklärung und Gestaltung wirtschaftsbetrieblicher Strukturwandlungen beitragen. Damit wird zugleich die praktische Relevanz wissenschaftlicher Erkenntnis verdeutlicht. Dieses Buch richtet sich daher nicht nur an Wissenschaftler und Studierende, sondern in gleicher Weise auch an Verantwortliche in der Arbeitswelt, also an Führungskräfte, Unternehmensleitungen und Beschäftigte in der Personal- und Organisationsentwicklung
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
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  • 5
    ISBN: 9789400770126
    Language: English
    Pages: Online-Ressource (XIV, 395 p. 38 illus., 16 illus. in color, online resource)
    Series Statement: Professional and Practice-based Learning 9
    Series Statement: SpringerLink
    Series Statement: Bücher
    Parallel Title: Druckausg. Discourses on Professional Learning
    RVK:
    Keywords: Adult education ; Applied psychology ; Education ; Education ; Adult education ; Applied psychology
    Abstract: This book analyses and elaborates on learning processes within work environments and explores professional learning. It presents research indicating general characteristics of the work environment that support learning, as well as barriers to workplace learning. Themes of professional development, lifelong learning and business organisation emerge through the chapters, and contributions explore theoretical and empirical analyses on the boundary between working and learning in various contexts and with various methodological approaches. Readers will discover how current workplace learning approaches can emphasise the learning potential of the work environment and how workplaces can combine the application of competence, that is working, with its acquisition or learning. Through these chapters, we learn about the educational challenge to design workplaces as environments of rich learning potential without neglecting business demands. Expert authors explore how learning and working are both to be considered as two common aspects of an individual’s activity. Complexity, significance, integrity, and variety of assigned work tasks as well as scope of action, interaction, and feedback within its processing, turn out to be crucial work characteristics, amongst others revealed in these chapters. Part of the Professional and Practice-based Learning series, this book will appeal to anyone with an interest in workplaces as learning environments: those within government, community or business agencies and within the research communities in education, psychology, sociology, and business management will find it of great interest
    Description / Table of Contents: Discourses on professional learning: on the boundary between learning and working, Christian Harteis, Andreas Rausch, Jürgen SeifriedPart I: Analytic perspective 1 - Learning in work context -- Informal learning in workplaces - understanding learning culture as a challenge for organizational development, Christoph Fischer, Bridget O’Connor -- Agentic behaviour at work: Crafting learning experiences, Michael Goller, Stephen Billett -- Practiced professional agency and collaborative creativity, Panu Forsman, Kaija Collin, Anneli Eteläpelto -- Mediating occupational learning at work, Stephen Billett -- Error Climate and the Individual Dealing with Errors in the Workplace, Alexander Baumgartner, Jürgen Seifried -- Reflection and reflective behaviour in work teams, Thomas Schley, Marianne van Woerkom -- Part II: Analytic perspective 2 - Work as learning environment -- Apprenticeship and Vocational Education, Karl-Heinz Gerholz, Taiga Brahm -- Learning in response to workplace change, Mark Tyler, Sarojni Choy, Ray Smith, Darryl Dymock -- Grasping learning during internships: The case of engineering education, David Gijbels, Christian Harteis, Vinvent Donche, Piet van den Bossche, Steffi Maes, Katrin Temmen -- Employing agency in academic settings: Doctoral students shaping their own experiences, Michael Goller, Christian Harteis -- Developing medical capacities and dispositions through practice-based experiences, Jennifer Cleland, Joseph Leaman, Stephen Billett -- ePortfolio: A Practical Tool for Self-directed, Reflective and Collaborative Professional Learning, Anna-Liza Daunert, Linda Price -- Part III: Methodological issues -- The integration of work and learning: Tackling the complexity with Structural Equation Modelling, Eva Kyndt, Patrick Onghena -- Social network analyses of learning at workplaces, Tuire Palonen, Kai Hakkarainen -- Learning through interactional participatory configurations: contributions from video analysis, Laurent Filliettaz -- Using Diaries in Research on Work and Learning, Andreas Rausch -- Part IV: Conclusion -- Interdependence on the boundaries between working and learning, Stephen Billett.
    Note: Description based upon print version of record
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    URL: Cover
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  • 6
    ISBN: 0521867525
    Language: English
    Titel der Quelle: Skill formation
    Publ. der Quelle: Cambridge [u.a.] : Cambridge University Press, 2008
    Angaben zur Quelle: (2008), Seite 207-229
    Angaben zur Quelle: year:2008
    Angaben zur Quelle: pages:207-229
    Keywords: Berufsbildung ; Lernen ; Betriebliches Bildungsmanagement ; Aufsatz im Buch
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