1st Edition

Multiple Dimensions of Teaching and Learning for Occupational Practice

Edited By Sai Loo Copyright 2019
    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    264 Pages
    by Routledge

    Multiple Dimensions of Teaching and Learning for Occupational Practice offers a collection of international perspectives on work-related education and training at further/Technical and Vocational Education and Training (TVET), higher and professional levels. The book provides a new area of study of occupational education with tripartite dimensions concerning learning, teaching and working.





    Providing space for further research and implementation possibilities, the book offers comprehensive multidisciplinary and multi-level perspectives, giving extensive coverage of the structure and focus of these types of programmes concerning geographical locations and academic levels, and also drawing on perspectives from national, institutional and individual interactions. Topics of investigations include apprenticeships, education of occupational teachers, training of workers and entrepreneurs, and working of physicians.





    Multiple Dimensions of Teaching and Learning for Occupational Practice will be vital reading for academics in education, educationalists in the related areas of clinical practices, sports and culture-related industries, researchers, policymakers, government officials and those from socio-development change agencies.

    Chapter 1



    Researching occupational practice



    SAI LOO





    Chapter 2



    Ausbildungsberufe’ – a necessary and complex ingredient of the ‘Dual’ apprenticeship frameworks



    LORENZ LASSNIGG





    Chapter 3



    Occupational preparation for manual work: fitter/machinists and concrete operators



    ERICA SMITH





    Chapter 4



    Perspectives of beginning trades tutors on teaching and learning



    SELENA CHAN





    Chapter 5



    A typology of occupational teachers’ capacities across the three academic levels



    SAI LOO





    Chapter 6



    Education and training in human movement programmes: stakeholder perspectives



    SALLEE CALDWELL AND MELINDA HALL





    Chapter 7



    Educating work-ready youth workers: designing a university program for Australian and international contexts



    JENNIFER BROOKER





    Chapter 8



    Learning to become an entrepreneur in unfavourable conditions: the case of new-entrants in the context of the Greek debt-crisis



    KONSTANTINOS KARANASIOS AND THOMAS LANS





    Chapter 9



    Professionalism and affective learning for new prison officers: learning values, attitudes and behaviours in training at the Scottish Prison Service



    KATRINA MORRISON





    Chapter 10



    The journey from healthcare assistant to assistant practitioner: working and learning



    CLAIRE THURGATE





    Chapter 11



    Understanding and appraising medical students’ learning through clinical experiences: participatory practices at work



    STEPHEN BILLETT AND LINDA SWEET





    Chapter 12



    Learning decision making in Emergency Medicine



    DUNCAN THOMAS CARMICHAEL





    Chapter 13



    Reflections on the occupational practice



    SAI LOO





    Index

    Biography

    Sai Loo is an academic at the UCL Institute of Education, University College London, United Kingdom.

    "This research monograph presents the concept of "ocupational practice" as a possible common denominator across different educational levels and systems, academic disciplines and countries. The total of 13 contributions were written by highly esteemed international researchers from various disciplines and countries. The guiding principle of the volume is to capture TVET, professional and higher education not over the divide, but through what they share in common, which is the connection of teaching, learning and working. This approach does not aim to negate differences, but to condense what is expressed in multiple dimensions of teaching and learning for an occupational practice. The approach of "occupational education", based on this concept, could become a central leitmotif that can bridge the educational world to the world of work across disciplines, levels, systems and countries. Such a boundary object is missing so far. I welcome and appreciate this comprehensive and comparative approach because it asks the fundamental question - what is the pattern that connects? I can confirm what the editor notes: This research monograph is suitable to open the ground for a possible new area of education."

    Prof. Dr. Dr. h.c. Michael Gessler, Chair of Vocational and Professional Education and Training, University of Bremen, Institute Technology and Education (ITB), Germany.