1st Edition
Education, Work and Social Capital Towards a New Conception of Vocational Training
By Christopher Winch
Copyright 2000
230 Pages
by
Routledge
240 Pages
by
Routledge
Also available as eBook on:
This book provides an integrated treatment of the relationship between political economy and vocational education at the beginning of the twenty-first century. Approaching the subject from a philosophical perspective the author engages with debates about * the work-related aims of education * the moral and spiritual significance of work * the conceptualisation of political economy * high-skill... Read more
1. Education, Work and Social Capital: Introduction2. Necessity, Work, Effort and Leisure3. The Economic and Work Related Aims of Education4. Conceptualising Economic Life: Part One, The Consumptionist Tradition5. Conceptualising Economic Life: Part Two, Listian Political Economy6. Education, Moral Education and Work7. Vocational Education and Vocational Training8. Learning in the Workplace9. Two Rival Conceptions of Vocational Education10. Education and Labour Markets11. Education, Well-being and Economic Growth12. The Social Value of Work13. Education and the 'End of Work' Thesis14. Education and Work in a Social Capital Perspective15. Policy Issues: Schooling, Qualifications and the Transition to Work
Biography
Christopher Winch is Professor of Philosophy of Education at University College Northampton. His recent publications include The Philosophy of Human Learning and co-author of Key Concepts in the Philosophy of Education, both published by Routledge.
'There are lots of interesting arguments in this book.' - British Journal of Educational Studies
'Indeed, the descriptions and explanations of a range of related aspects of education, politics and economics in a social and moral context, offer a valuable resource for educational professionals ... Those currently involved in, and those who advocate the expansion of vocational education, will find useful arguments in this book to support the furtherance of their cause.' - Educational Philosophy and Theory






