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This volume considers, rethinks and reorganizes how support for
learning across working life can be best conceptualized, organized
and enacted. It considers educational and learning support
processes that include approaches that fit well within working
lives and workplaces, and support work and learning as a
co-occurrence. These are the key focuses for individual and
collective contributions to this edited volume, which provide
discussions about what constitutes learning across working lives
and how this differs from lifelong learning and lifelong education.
Accounts of learning across the working lives of social workers,
doctors working in hospitals and in general practice, teaching,
aviation, nursing, mining, aged care and more. These accounts
advance a range of ways in which workers' learning across working
lives is being supported and how this support is also linked to
other changes, such as to the occupational practice in which they
engage.
This volume considers, rethinks and reorganizes how support for
learning across working life can be best conceptualized, organized
and enacted. It considers educational and learning support
processes that include approaches that fit well within working
lives and workplaces, and support work and learning as a
co-occurrence. These are the key focuses for individual and
collective contributions to this edited volume, which provide
discussions about what constitutes learning across working lives
and how this differs from lifelong learning and lifelong education.
Accounts of learning across the working lives of social workers,
doctors working in hospitals and in general practice, teaching,
aviation, nursing, mining, aged care and more. These accounts
advance a range of ways in which workers' learning across working
lives is being supported and how this support is also linked to
other changes, such as to the occupational practice in which they
engage.
Between 1966 and 1973, while Australian troops were fighting in
Vietnam, some 300 conscripted teachers were quietly posted to Papua
New Guinea. Colloquially known as 'Chalkies', their task was to
raise the educational level of troops of the Pacific Islands
Regiment in what turned out to be critical years leading up to the
country's independence. Drawing on the recollections of more than
70 of those National Servicemen, Dr Darryl Dymock, a former
Chalkie, tells the story of how these young teachers responded to
the challenges of a life most of them never wanted or imagined for
themselves, in an exotic land on Australia's doorstep. It's a
unique tale of the good, the bad and the unexpected, told with
flair and insight against the background of political developments
of the day. 'An educational scheme which for magnitude, scope,
intensity and enlightenment is without parallel in military
history.' - Brigadier Ernest Gould
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