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Re-contextualising learning in second modernity

Changing boundaries between categories of knowledge, together with changing relations with propositional and experiential knowledge, demand reconsideration of what counts as learning. Such re-contextualisation processes can be approached from three standpoints: deconstruction-decoding (learning as a differentiated set of related practices), refocusing-repositioning (situating learning sites in a life-course perspective) and reconstruction-recoding (specifying pedagogic discourse to embrace non-formal and informal learning). Learning in second modernity might hold emancipatory promise, but this requires fundamental re-structuring of teaching/learning contexts in all respects, not least in the re-positioning of all learners as adults, in the sense of being autonomous and responsible shapers of their potentially highly differentiated learning biographies - but it equally heralds an intensification of discipline of the self.

Changing boundaries between categories of knowledge, together with changing relations with propositional and experiential ...  Show Full Abstract  

Authors: Chisholm, Lynne
Date: 2008
Journal title: Research in post-compulsory education
Resource type: Article
Subjects: Outcomes; Teaching and learning; Economics;

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