新加坡青年实习期间的差异学习

IF 1.4 Q2 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
K. Mirchandani, Asmita Bhutani
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引用次数: 3

摘要

对年轻人的体验式学习倡议寄予了很大的希望。这种希望与联合国教科文组织(UNESCO)和世界银行(World Bank)等全球性组织采用的政策方法一致,在这些组织中,学习被视为实现转型、自我实现和社会发展的工具。为了给年轻人提供机会来体验这种自我发现,实习机会越来越多,这有助于年轻人从教育到工作的过渡。本文探讨了这种体验式学习的更险恶的一面。我们描绘了年轻人通过实习了解种族不平等和阶级特权的方式。新加坡是一个拥有多种族人口和强烈精英主义倾向的全球城市,我们通过与年轻人进行的焦点小组讨论,探讨了年轻人对他们的“差异学习”的讨论。在实习期间,年轻人了解到基于种族和性别的职场排斥,特权的社会结构和企业权力的霸权。我们认为,对差异学习的认识为实习设计提供了潜力,为挑战职场文化中基于种族和阶级的不平等提供了机会。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Disparity learning during youth internships in Singapore
ABSTRACT A great deal of hope is pinned on experiential learning initiatives for young people. This hope is in line with policy approaches adopted by global organisations such as UNESCO and the World Bank in which learning is characterised as the vehicle through which transformation, self-actualisation and social development can occur. In order to provide young people the opportunity to experience such self-discovery, there has been a growth in internships which serve to facilitate young people’s transition from education to work. This paper explores the more sinister sides of such experiential learning. We map the ways in which youth learn about racial inequalities and class privilege through internships. Drawing on focus groups conducted with youth in Singapore, a global city with a multiracial population and a strong orientation towards meritocracy, we explore young people's discussions of their ‘disparity learning’. During internships, youth learn about workplace exclusion on the basis of race and gender, social structures of privilege and the hegemony of corporate power. We suggest that the recognition of disparity learning opens up the potential for the design of internships which provide opportunities for challenging race and class based inequalities embedded in workplace cultures.
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来源期刊
Journal of Vocational Education and Training
Journal of Vocational Education and Training EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
5.20
自引率
15.80%
发文量
37
期刊介绍: The Journal of Vocational Education and Training is a peer-reviewed international journal which welcomes submissions involving a critical discussion of policy and practice, as well as contributions to conceptual and theoretical developments in the field. It includes articles based on empirical research and analysis (quantitative, qualitative and mixed method) and welcomes papers from a wide range of disciplinary and inter-disciplinary perspectives. The journal embraces the broad range of settings and ways in which vocational and professional learning takes place and, hence, is not restricted by institutional boundaries or structures in relation to national systems of education and training. It is interested in the study of curriculum, pedagogy, and assessment, as well as economic, cultural and political aspects related to the role of vocational and professional education and training in society. When submitting papers for consideration, the journal encourages authors to consider and engage with debates concerning issues relevant to the focus of their work that have been previously published in the journal. The journal hosts a biennial international conference to provide a forum for researchers to debate and gain feedback on their work, and to encourage comparative analysis and international collaboration. From the first issue of Volume 48, 1996, the journal changed its title from The Vocational Aspect of Education to Journal of Vocational Education and Training.
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