What students who perform in “secondary roles” can learn from scenario training in vocational education

IF 1.5 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
David Sjöberg, Staffan Karp, Oscar Rantatalo
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引用次数: 4

Abstract

Context: Learning through scenario training and live simulation in vocational education is generally regarded as an effective tool for developing professional knowledge. However, previous research has largely overlooked the learning of students in secondary roles in scenario training. The objective of this study is to explore learning for students who act in secondary roles during scenario training in vocational educational settings.  Method: The studied case entails scenario training for police students in a Swedish police education programme. A case study design, which included both participant observation and a questionnaire, was used. The analytic lens applied was inspired by practice theory and focused on how structural and situational arrangements of the training activity affect learning.  Results: Our findings show that students who act in secondary roles learn from their scenario training experiences, but this learning often is overlooked in the design of training activities. Due to the structural arrangements of training activities, learning emerged as students in secondary roles were tasked to support the primary participants in relation to their learning objectives. In addition, it emerged in how students in secondary roles used previous scenario training experiences in relation to the current scenario and its learning objectives. Examples of learning from situational arrangements emerged as students in secondary roles formulated and provided feedback to primary participants and through informal discussions and reflection processes. Learning also emerged as students in secondary roles embodied the “other” during scenario training, something that provided the students with new perspectives on police encounters.  Conclusions: We theorize and extract three dimensions for how learning emerges in this case for secondary participants. It emerges through embodying the “other”, in students’ sensory experiences, and through reconstruction of knowledge through repetition. However, our findings also show that learning for students in secondary roles can be improved through mindful set-up and design. Based on the findings, our article provides a discussion and suggestions on how scenario training can be planned and set-up to develop professional knowledge for students in secondary roles. 
扮演“次要角色”的学生可以从职业教育的情景训练中学到什么
情境:在职业教育中,通过情景训练和现场模拟进行学习被普遍认为是发展专业知识的有效工具。然而,以往的研究在很大程度上忽视了情景训练中学生的次要角色学习。摘要本研究的目的是探讨在职业教育情境训练中扮演次要角色的学生的学习情况。方法:所研究的案例需要在瑞典警察教育计划中对警察学生进行情景培训。采用案例研究设计,包括参与者观察和问卷调查。应用的分析视角受到实践理论的启发,并关注培训活动的结构和情境安排如何影响学习。结果:我们的研究结果表明,扮演次要角色的学生从他们的情景训练经验中学习,但这种学习往往在训练活动的设计中被忽视。由于培训活动的结构性安排,作为次要角色的学生的学习出现了,他们的任务是支持主要参与者实现他们的学习目标。此外,次要角色的学生如何将先前的情景训练经验与当前情景及其学习目标联系起来,也体现了这一点。从情景安排中学习的例子出现在次要角色的学生制定并向主要参与者提供反馈以及通过非正式讨论和反思过程中。在情景训练中,作为次要角色的学生体现了“他者”,这也为学生提供了关于警察遭遇的新视角。结论:我们理论化并提取了三个维度来解释在这种情况下,次要参与者是如何学习的。它通过对“他者”的体现,在学生的感官体验中,通过重复对知识的重构而产生。然而,我们的研究结果也表明,学生在次要角色的学习可以通过有意识的设置和设计来改善。基于这些发现,我们的文章就如何规划和设置情景训练来培养学生的专业知识提供了讨论和建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
2.90
自引率
23.10%
发文量
14
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