Influences on the education of vocational education and training (VET) practitioners

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Permanent URL for this page: http://hdl.voced.edu.au/10707/153245.


Author: Dunn, Lee; Corben, Helen

Abstract:

This paper explores the concept that there are at least two broad areas of research that inform the design of vocational education programs for practitioners in the VET sector. In particular one that focuses on the needs of government and industry and is discussed in terms of desired behavioural outcomes, and another that is concerned with the teaching/training and learning relationship and is discussed in terms of process. The fairly new role of VET in the productive sector sees institutions taking on the characteristics of firms or enterprises. VET organisations and institutions are now direct producers of goods and services. Research has been undertaken to investigate the behavioural outcomes required by VET practitioners to meet the needs of a deregulated VET market. There is also a large body of research (undertaken in a variety of educational settings) that looks at approaches to teaching and learning, including the tacit knowledge and skills that are the informal and implicit conventions, values and norms of the profession. Social and political values are considered alongside economic values. It is argued that research into the desired behavioural outcomes is so influential that it could see the teaching and learning research minimised or overlooked by policy makers and educational designers, when it is equally important in the education of effective VET practitioners.

Published abstract reprinted by permission of the copyright owner.

The title of the conference was 'Changing practice through research: changing research through practice'. This volume of the collected papers is indexed at TD/ANTA 82.133; selected papers are indexed from TD/TNC 60.173 to TD/TNC 60.183.

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This paper explores the concept that there are at least two broad areas of research that inform the design of vocational education programs for practitioners in the VET sector. In particular one that focuses on the needs of government and industry and is discussed in terms of desired behavioural outcomes, and another that is concerned with the teaching/training and learning relationship and is discussed in terms of process. The fairly new role of VET in the productive sector sees institutions taking on the characteristics of firms or enterprises. VET organisations and institutions are ...  [+] Show more

Subjects: Quality; Skills and knowledge; Vocational education and training; Research; Policy; Governance; Evaluation; Teaching and learning; Providers of education and training

Keywords: Training package; Skill development; Educational research; Educational policy; Vocational teachers; Curriculum development; Education and training reform; Training evaluation; Teacher training; Teachers

Geographic subjects: Oceania; Australia

Published: Brisbane, Queensland: Centre for Learning and Work Research, Griffith University, 1999

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Book Title: Changing practice through research: changing research through practice: conference papers: volume 5.

Pages: pp.60-69

Conference name: International Conference on Post-Compulsory Education and Training

Number: 7th

Date: 1999

Place: Gold Coast, Queensland

ISBN: 0868579653

Resource type: Conference

Call Number:
TD/TNC 60.179



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