职业实践、教育和学习中的挑战和可能性

IF 1.9 4区 教育学 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
N. Hopwood, A. Reich, D. Rooney, Jacqui McManus
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引用次数: 0

摘要

本期《继续教育研究》特刊精选了最初在悉尼科技大学于2019年12月主办的第四届专业实践、教育和学习(ProPEL)会议上发表的论文。ProPEL是一个协作的、多专业的国际网络(于2010年在斯特林大学启动),旨在促进专业教育、实践和学习问题的研究和知识交流。2019年会议的主题是“专业实践、教育和学习中的挑战和可能性”。它的目的是照亮未说出口的,未被要求的,无形的,拥抱创造性的,新兴的和意想不到的。会议邀请与会者扩展2017年上一届会议的对话,会上对专业实践的变化性质和学习的“实践”产生了浓厚的兴趣,正如Fenwick(2018)所指出的,以及对混乱、协调工作和对象的关注;时间和时间性作为被忽视的行动者组织实践;以及需要细致入微的方法来区分专业知识,以使概念更接近实践(Dahlgren, Gustavsson, and Fejes 2018)。因此,在2017年的会议上,许多困扰演讲者的问题在2019年仍然很紧迫,包括如何进行实践、在实践过程中学习的问题,以及那些尚未成为专业人士的人需要学习的问题(实际上,这是否是构建初始专业教育的合适方式)。本期特刊包括代表所探索的思想多样性和参与其中的参与者的论文。在接下来的论文中,重点研究了不同的专业,包括教学、工程、医学、建筑、法律、联合健康、幼儿教育和体育教练,以及探索研究实践本身的方法学论文。作者包括来自世界各地的杰出教授、研究生和实践者,有些是单独工作的,有些是合作团队的。那么,挑衅是什么呢?在一篇反思和对话的文章中,Kemmis(本期)甚至惊讶地得出结论:学习本身并不是一种实践。我们认为Kemmis的论点表明,教育和实践之间关系的棘手问题不能简单地通过将学习作为实践的概念将两者结合起来来解决。如何将专业教育和专业工作的实践能够并且应该联系起来,仍然是该领域许多工作的重点,需要解决这种联系,而不是在需要“桥梁”的不同世界之间制造人为的分歧,这使得这种联系变得复杂。相反,一种形成感和中间感,一种涌现感而不是结构感,以及一种即将被看到的感觉在会议上得到了体现。Stewart等人(本期)、Clerke等人(本期)、Maclean(本期)和Fawns等人(本期)的论文分别通过空间、实践、准对象和无缝学习的概念来解决这个问题。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Provocations and possibilities in professional practice, education, and learning
This Special Issue of Studies in Continuing Education presents a selection of papers originally presented at the fourth Professional Practice, Education and Learning (ProPEL) conference, hosted by the University of Technology Sydney in December 2019. ProPEL is a collaborative, multi-professional international network (launched in 2010 at the University of Stirling) to promote research and knowledge exchange in issues of professional education, practice and learning. The theme of the 2019 conference was Provocations and possibilities in professional practice, education, and learning. It aimed to shine a light on the unspoken, unasked, and intangible, and embracing the creative, emerging and unexpected. The conference invited participants to extend the conversations from the previous conference in 2017 where there was a significant interest in the changing nature of professional practice, and the ‘practice’ of learning, as noted by Fenwick (2018), as well as foci on messiness, coordination work, and objects; time and temporality as overlooked actors organising practices; and the need for nuanced approaches to differentiating expertise in ways that keep the notion closer to practice (Dahlgren, Gustavsson, and Fejes 2018). As a result, many of the questions that vexed presenters in that 2017 conference remained pressing in 2019, including questions of how practice gets done, the learning that happens in the course of practice, and the learning that needs to happen for those who are not-yet professionals (and indeed, whether this is an appropriate way to frame initial professional education). This Special Issue includes papers that represent the diversity of ideas explored and the participants engaging with them. Within the papers that follow are studies that focus on varied professions including teaching, engineering, medicine, architecture, law, allied health, early childhood education, and sports coaching, plus methodological papers exploring research practice itself. Authors include distinguished professors, research students, and practitioners, some working alone, others in collaborative teams, from around the world. So, what of provocation? In a reflective and conversational piece, Kemmis (this issue) appears to even surprise himself on reaching the conclusion that learning is not, in itself, a practice. We take Kemmis’ argument as suggesting that vexed questions of the relationships between education and practice cannot simply be resolved by collapsing one onto the other through a notion of learning as practice. How the practices of professional education and professional work can and should connect remains a key focus of much work in this field, complicated by the need to address this connection without creating artificial bifurcations between separate worlds that need ‘bridging’. Instead, a sense of becoming and the inbetween, of emergence rather than structure, and what is on the edge of being seen came through in the conference. Papers by Stewart et al. (this issue), Clerke et al. (this issue), Maclean (this issue) and Fawns et al. (this issue) tackle this through concepts of space, praxis, quasi-objects, and seamful learning respectively.
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来源期刊
Studies in Continuing Education
Studies in Continuing Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
4.70
自引率
6.70%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: Studies in Continuing Education is a scholarly journal concerned with all aspects of continuing, professional and lifelong learning. It aims to be of special interest to those involved in: •continuing professional education •adults learning •staff development •training and development •human resource development
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