Preparing professionals to meet the demands of changes in
practice is a compelling issue for the development of society,
professions and individual professionals. A key tenet of this book
is that we currently prepare professionals for the world of work in
ways that are generally limited in scope and inadequate for
addressing contemporary professional practice. The book critically
investigates professional education programmes and the assumptions
upon which they are based. It argues for an ontological turn in
which professional education attends not only to what students know
and can do, but also who they are becoming as professionals. In a
scholarly, well-grounded account, the book closely interweaves
theory and empirical material on learning to be professionals. It
provides a fresh, innovative approach to designing professional
education programmes, as well as to research about this important
enterprise. This book makes a timely, insightful contribution to
debate about educating for the professions.
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