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This book examines professional learning and relates it to the
acquisition of expertise, and the influence of individuals.
Professional learning, as discussed in the book, comprises all
kinds of occupational domains because employment and paid work
usually follow the achievement principle, i.e. workers are expected
to perform efficiently. The book suggests that the perspective of
expertise research is an appropriate lens to use for gaining
insight in how individuals can be prepared and enabled to
autonomously master the requirements of daily working life.
Expertise is understood as the capacity to reliably perform on an
extraordinary level, and the basic assumption is that experts are
best prepared to successfully cope with future challenges at
workplaces. The book comprehensively discusses issues of expertise
research and explores the nature of a successful individual and an
impeded individual. It proposes an integrated model of individual
and social components of expertise development, the i-PPP model.
The model provides insight in and an understanding of how
individuals can be enabled to develop and maintain professional
expertise in the context of daily work. Across all paradigms,
researchers, policy-makers, employers and trade unionists agree
that working conditions undergo permanent change through economic,
societal, and technological developments. Recently, the
digitalisation of (working) life became a hot topic of scientific
and societal discourses. Workplaces, thus, provide challenges for
individuals who have to be able to cope with workplace changes.
Accordingly, new challenges emerge for an adequate understanding of
learning for work as well as learning during work.
About the Book Series The idea for the Book Series "Innovation and
Change in Professional Education" (ICPE) was born in 1996. While
working on another publication in this area, we noticed that
professional educators faced similar problems without even knowing
from each other. It was this observation that resulted in examining
the possibilities for a new publication platform about professional
education with input from different professions. We wanted to
develop a publication source that would bring together educators
and researchers to exchange ideas and knowledge about theory,
research and professional practice. But we were not only striving
for a book series informing readers about important themes in the
professions. A second goal was to focus on processes of change and
innovation. We were heavily involved in innovations going on in our
institutions, and were convinced that a better understanding was
needed in a wide range of issues critically important to the future
of professional education. It was our belief that scholarly
publications about innovation processes may support fundamental
change in professional education. ICPE reflects our view that
professional education deserves such a publication platform. It
aims to approach critical questions of educational innovations, and
to examine dynamics of educational change in various professional
domains in the context of innovation processes. The books will
include contributions from frontline practitioners, leading
researchers, or distinguished scholars in professional education,
delivering reports of empirical or theoretical research, reviews,
interpretations of evaluation studies, or descriptions of
innovative approaches.
This book examines professional learning and relates it to the
acquisition of expertise, and the influence of individuals.
Professional learning, as discussed in the book, comprises all
kinds of occupational domains because employment and paid work
usually follow the achievement principle, i.e. workers are expected
to perform efficiently. The book suggests that the perspective of
expertise research is an appropriate lens to use for gaining
insight in how individuals can be prepared and enabled to
autonomously master the requirements of daily working life.
Expertise is understood as the capacity to reliably perform on an
extraordinary level, and the basic assumption is that experts are
best prepared to successfully cope with future challenges at
workplaces. The book comprehensively discusses issues of expertise
research and explores the nature of a successful individual and an
impeded individual. It proposes an integrated model of individual
and social components of expertise development, the i-PPP model.
The model provides insight in and an understanding of how
individuals can be enabled to develop and maintain professional
expertise in the context of daily work. Across all paradigms,
researchers, policy-makers, employers and trade unionists agree
that working conditions undergo permanent change through economic,
societal, and technological developments. Recently, the
digitalisation of (working) life became a hot topic of scientific
and societal discourses. Workplaces, thus, provide challenges for
individuals who have to be able to cope with workplace changes.
Accordingly, new challenges emerge for an adequate understanding of
learning for work as well as learning during work.
About the Book Series The idea for the Book Series "Innovation and
Change in Professional Education" (ICPE) was born in 1996. While
working on another publication in this area, we noticed that
professional educators faced similar problems without even knowing
from each other. It was this observation that resulted in examining
the possibilities for a new publication platform about professional
education with input from different professions. We wanted to
develop a publication source that would bring together educators
and researchers to exchange ideas and knowledge about theory,
research and professional practice. But we were not only striving
for a book series informing readers about important themes in the
professions. A second goal was to focus on processes of change and
innovation. We were heavily involved in innovations going on in our
institutions, and were convinced that a better understanding was
needed in a wide range of issues critically important to the future
of professional education. It was our belief that scholarly
publications about innovation processes may support fundamental
change in professional education. ICPE reflects our view that
professional education deserves such a publication platform. It
aims to approach critical questions of educational innovations, and
to examine dynamics of educational change in various professional
domains in the context of innovation processes. The books will
include contributions from frontline practitioners, leading
researchers, or distinguished scholars in professional education,
delivering reports of empirical or theoretical research, reviews,
interpretations of evaluation studies, or descriptions of
innovative approaches.
Wie tragen erziehungswissenschaftliche Fragestellungen und
Forschungsergebnisse zur Beschreibung, Erklarung und Gestaltung
wirtschaftsbetrieblicher Strukturwandlungen bei? Die Darstellung
"Kapital und Kompetenz" verdeutlicht die praktische Relevanz
wissenschaftlicher Erkenntnis und richtet sich nicht nur an
Wissenschaftler und Studierende, sondern in gleicher Weise an
Verantwortliche in der Arbeitswelt, Fuhrungskrafte,
Unternehmensleitungen und Beschaftigte in Personal- und
Organisationsentwicklung.
Dieses Buch ist der erste umfassende deutschsprachige Sammelband
zur Expertiseforschung. Der Beitrag der deutschsprachigen Forschung
zum Thema zeichnet sich u. a. durch eine immer starkere
padagogisch-psychologische statt einer allgemeinpsychologischen
Ausrichtung aus. Die Foerderung des Expertiseerwerbs sowie die
Suche nach praktischen Anwendungsmoeglichkeiten der Forschung in
der (vor allem beruflichen) Praxis sind Indikatoren fur diese
Entwicklung. Die Beitrage namhafter Autoren sind in zwei
Teilbereiche unterteilt: 'Theoretische Einordnung von Expertise'
und 'Methoden der Expertiseforschung'.
The International Handbook of Research in Professional and
Practice-based Learning discusses what constitutes professionalism,
examines the concepts and practices of professional and
practice-based learning, including associated research traditions
and educational provisions. It also explores professional learning
in institutions of higher and vocational education as well the
practice settings where professionals work and learn, focusing on
both initial and ongoing development and how that learning is
assessed. The Handbook features research from expert contributors
in education, studies of the professions, and accounts of research
methodologies from a range of informing disciplines. It is
organized in two parts. The first part sets out conceptions of
professionalism at work, how professions, work and learning can be
understood, and examines the kinds of institutional practices
organized for developing occupational capacities. The second part
focuses on procedural issues associated with learning for and
through professional practice, and how assessment of professional
capacities might progress. The key premise of this Handbook is that
during both initial and ongoing professional development,
individual learning processes are influenced and shaped through
their professional environment and practices. Moreover, in turn,
the practice and processes of learning through practice are shaped
by their development, all of which are required to be understood
through a range of research orientations, methods and findings.
This Handbook will appeal to academics working in fields of
professional practice, including those who are concerned about
developing these capacities in their students. In addition,
students and research students will also find this Handbook a key
reference resource to the field.
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