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A volume in Advances in Cultural Psychology Series Editor: Jaan
Valsiner, Clark University This book is a result of a major
research project in Switzerland that brings together the fields of
Education and Socio-Cultural Psychology. It is focused on how
culture is involved in very concrete educational practices. The
reader is invited to follow the research group in a Swiss technical
college that trains young people in precision mechanics during a
period of major technological change: the arrival of automated
manufacturing systems. This transition in the trade is an
opportunity to explore the educational and psychological challenges
of vocational training from a perspective inspired by activity
theory and the consideration of social interactions and semiotic or
other technical mediations as crucial to the formation of
professional identities and competencies. What are the most
appropriate settings for learning? There is no simple answer to
this question. What can lead a pupil to become engaged, even if
this is within a school, with all the seriousness of a future
professional? Under which conditions is an internship in a company
genuinely formative? Is it necessary to possess the most recent
technologies in order to offer high quality training? What do we
know about the relation between doing and knowing in the
construction of new competences? How can it be planned and informed
to become an object of reflection and make sense in the eyes of the
learner? Dealing with such questions, this study explores new
working hypotheses on the manner in which the young experience
their training and on the significant role for them of professional
specialization.
A volume in Advances in Cultural Psychology Series Editor: Jaan
Valsiner, Clark University This book is a result of a major
research project in Switzerland that brings together the fields of
Education and Socio-Cultural Psychology. It is focused on how
culture is involved in very concrete educational practices. The
reader is invited to follow the research group in a Swiss technical
college that trains young people in precision mechanics during a
period of major technological change: the arrival of automated
manufacturing systems. This transition in the trade is an
opportunity to explore the educational and psychological challenges
of vocational training from a perspective inspired by activity
theory and the consideration of social interactions and semiotic or
other technical mediations as crucial to the formation of
professional identities and competencies. What are the most
appropriate settings for learning? There is no simple answer to
this question. What can lead a pupil to become engaged, even if
this is within a school, with all the seriousness of a future
professional? Under which conditions is an internship in a company
genuinely formative? Is it necessary to possess the most recent
technologies in order to offer high quality training? What do we
know about the relation between doing and knowing in the
construction of new competences? How can it be planned and informed
to become an object of reflection and make sense in the eyes of the
learner? Dealing with such questions, this study explores new
working hypotheses on the manner in which the young experience
their training and on the significant role for them of professional
specialization.
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