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This book develops and illustrates a new promising workshop
methodology utilized for the first time in a comparative study
between Italy and Australia. It is shown how Change Laboratory
workshops are useful to trigger sense of initiative and
entrepreneurship in vocational students.
This open access book illustrates a new type of formative
intervention for in-service teacher training in entrepreneurship
education. The book describes a Change Laboratory and shows how
teachers and workshop assistants develop the idea of a
multidisciplinary project entailing the design of a self-service
and parking lot in a dismissed area close to the city centre. The
multidisciplinary project is taken as example of how an idea is
debated and turned into collective action and change, the very
essence of initiative and entrepreneurship. The Change Laboratory
thus increases the participation of students, teachers and
stakeholders in the school towards a new curriculum through the
implementation of a multidisciplinary project connecting school
with the world outside and working life. The book features a
foreword by Luke Pittaway, USASBE Entrepreneurship Educator of
2018. The manuscript discusses key concepts of Cultural Historical
Activity Theory's Change Laboratory as a formative intervention in
a coherent and accessible manner. Beyond that it carefully
illustrates how the Change Laboratory and its principles of double
stimulation and ascending from the abstract to the concrete can be
used as a theory of change to address one of the difficult and new
demands of the European Union's New Skills Agenda. The author takes
the reader through the expansive learning journey and uses strong
evidence to show how a new object can be developed, and how
associated tensions and contradictions can be surfaced and tackled
by actors with a partially shared object, and how a new concept can
be formed and enriched through implementation and reflection in a
manner that generates collective transformative agency. (Reviewer)
This project has received funding from the European Union's Horizon
2020 research and innovation programme under the Marie
Sklodowska-Curie Grant Agreement No. 654101.
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