Tidying the territory: questioning terms and purposes in work-learning research
Permanent URL for this page: http://hdl.voced.edu.au/10707/119117.
Author: Fenwick, Tara J.
Abstract:
Purpose - The purpose of this paper is to argue that foundational terms in work-learning research, specifically 'learning', 'work', and 'workplace', are inherently complex and contested as the same as their scope has expanded in different fields to elide various conceptual categories and theoretical positions. Yet researchers often use these terms without explanation, or as generic abstractions. The article suggests rigorous questioning and more precise delineation to reveal conceptual tangles in work-learning research and build links across disciplinary languages and research traditions. Design/methodology/approach - The argument is theory-driven, and draws upon a meta-review of work-learning studies published in ten journals in the period 1999-2004. Findings - Often without clarification, the term 'learning' in work is used to refer to learning as 'product' (knowledge acquisition, transfer, control), as 'process' (as cultural change, individual development, network dynamics, practice, collective sense-making, identity negotiations, or problem-solving), and as all conscious human experience. Work is used to refer to almost any activity, paid and unpaid. Issues of power relations in work become side-stepped with these conflations, and the conceptual categories dissolve when they cannot distinguish what is not learning. These issues blur the contribution of work-learning research (e.g. what is gained through learning studies focused on one context defined by labor relations). Practical implications - More precise definitions of terms, conceptualizations and purposes in work-learning research may help reveal conflicting positions, absences, similarities and links, towards more dialogue and rigorous theory-building across fields. Originality/value - The article intends to help researchers pause and reflect on the fundamental concepts and processes they seek to explore.
Published abstract reprinted by permission of the copyright owner.
[-] Show lessPurpose - The purpose of this paper is to argue that foundational terms in work-learning research, specifically 'learning', 'work', and 'workplace', are inherently complex and contested as the same as their scope has expanded in different fields to elide various conceptual categories and theoretical positions. Yet researchers often use these terms without explanation, or as generic abstractions. The article suggests rigorous questioning and more precise delineation to reveal conceptual tangles in work-learning research and build links across disciplinary ... [+] Show more
Subjects: Research; Teaching and learning; Workforce development
Keywords: Learning process; Workplace learning
Published: Bradford, England: Emerald, 2006
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Journal title: Journal of workplace learning
Journal volume : 18
Journal number: 5
Journal date: 2006
Pages: pp.265-278
ISSN: 1366-5626
Statement of responsibility: Tara Fenwick
Resource type: Article
Call Number:
TD/TNC 86.565
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