This book draws on experiences from a range of vocational education systems in different nation states and re-examines the purpose of providing experiences outside educational institutions; the kinds and extent of those experiences; and efforts made to ensure the integration of students’ experiences across sites. Analyses of the various vocational education systems, their purposes and practices across nations, and challenges experienced by different stakeholders illustrate different approaches to the integration of learning at different sites. The book includes a consideration of what constitutes the integration and reconciliation of experiences, and their attendant educational implications. This extends an appraisal of the concepts of integration, reconciliation, curriculum and work readiness, each of which has a range of connotations. Integration or reconciliation is differentiated from transfer of learning, which is commonly based on simple assumptions that the educational institutions will provide theory and that the workplaces will provide practice from the workplaces, and that the two can be easily linked by students. The contributions from different nation states clearly demonstrate that integration is a collaborative process and requires the agency of stakeholders operating at global, national and specific learning site levels.
Inhaltsverzeichnis
Section 1 Provision and integration of work experiences within vocational education.- 1 Integration between school and work: Developments, conceptions and applications.- 2 Student readiness and the integration of experiences in practice and education settings.- 3 Work experience and VET: Insights from the
connective typology and the
recontextualisation model.- 4 Varieties of “Duality”: Workbased learning and vocational education in international comparative research.- Section 2 Integrating work experiences within vocational education: Empirical cases.- 5 Integration of learning in educational institutions and workplaces: An Australian case study.- 6 Learner agency and the negotiation of practice.- 7 Integration for holistic development of apprentices’ competences in Finland.- 8 Variations in Implementing the Dual VET System: Perspectives of Students, Teachers and Trainers in the Certified Trades in Iceland.- 9 Work-integrated learning in Aotearoa/New Zealand: Diversity, biculturalism and industry-led.- 10 Even better than the real thing: Practice-based learning and vocational thresholds at work.- 11 e Portfolios as hybrid learning arenas in vocational education and training.- 12 Development of vocational skills through integration of practical training periods in school based vocational education in Norway.- 13 Spaces and spaces ‘in between’ – relations through pedagogical tools and learning.- 14 Creation of workplace learning paths in school based apprenticeships.- 15 Integration between school and work: Changes and challenges in Swedish VET 1970-2015.- 16 Success factors for fostering the connection between learning in school and at the workplace: The voice of Swiss VET actors.- 17 Concepts, purposes practices of integration across national curriculum.- 18 Considerations for integration of students’ experiences.
Über den Autor
Dr Sarojni Choy is an Associate Professor of Professional, Continuing and Vocational Education at Griffith University. Her responsibilities include teaching graduate and postgraduate courses, and supervising higher degree research students. Her research and writing activities focus on workplace learning, integration of learning, employment based training, continuing education and training, and workforce capacity building. Professor Choy serves on the editorial boards of two international journals, and is a regular reviewer for three international journals and international conferences in vocational education. She is currently assistant editor for the journal Vocations and Learning: Studies in Vocational and Professional Education (published by Springer), and co-editor of the monographs: Supporting learning across working life: Models, processes and practices; and Practice Theory Perspectives on Pedagogy and Education, published by Springer.
Dr Gun-Britt Wärvik is an Associate Professor of Education at the Department of Education and Special Education, University of Gothenburg. From 2011 to 2017 she was a member of the steering board of two research schools in vocational education. Her work primarily includes teaching graduate and postgraduate courses, supervising Ph D students and research. Her research interests concern the political aspects of educational phenomena, including educational restructuring, lifelong learning and vocational education.
Dr Viveca Lindberg is an Associate Professor of Education and Learning in Working Life and Adult Learning at the Department of Education and Special Education, University of Gothenburg. From 2011 to 2017 she was coordinator of two postgraduate programmes in vocational education. Her work chiefly includes teaching, supervising Ph D students and research. Her research interests concern vocational knowing in context, as well as assessment of students’ vocational knowing.